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Why friendship and loneliness affect our health

Robin Dunbar

2025Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Humans, like all monkeys and apes, have an intense desire to be social. The human social world, however, is extraordinarily complex, depends on sophisticated cognitive and neural processing, and is easily destabilized, with dramatic consequences for our mental and physical health. To show why, I first summarize descriptive aspects of human friendships and what they do for us, then discuss the cognitive and neurobiological processes that underpin them. I then summarize the growing body of evidence suggesting that our mental as well as our physical health and wellbeing are best predicted by the number and quality of close friend/family relationships we have, with five being the optimal number. Finally, I review neurobiological evidence that both number of friends and loneliness itself are correlated with the volume of certain key brain regions associated with the default mode neural network and its associated gray-matter processing units.

Topics & Concepts

LonelinessFriendshipCognitionPsychologyMental healthAffect (linguistics)Default mode networkPhysical healthSocial cognitionDevelopmental psychologyCognitive psychologySocial psychologyNeuroscienceCommunicationPsychiatryFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorStress Responses and Cortisol
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