Title: Social Neuroscience, Psychophysiology, and Aging
1Social Neuroscience, Psychophysiology, and Aging
- Robert W. Levenson, Ph.D.
- University of California, Berkeley
- NIA Workshop on Neuroeconomics and Aging
- March 31, 2006
2Emotion What does it look like?
- Brief, not long
- Shorter duration than moods, emotional traits,
emotional pathologies - Waves, not steady states
- Readily crosses internal/external boundaries
- Stimulation
- Major Impact
Emotional Response
Match to Prototype
Antecedent Event
3Emotion and Other Affective Phenomena A Matter
of Time
- Emotion
- Mood
- Emotional trait
- Emotional plot
- Emotional disorder
- Sadness
- Feeling blue
- Melancholy
- Mourning
- Depression
Longerlasting
(Based on Ekman, 1986)
4The psychophysiological approachAre emotions
organized or chaotic?
Accident
5Why Is Emotion Important in Aging?
- Emotion plays a major role in the establishment
and maintenance of social relationships - Friendship/Companionship
- Marriage and other intimate relationships
- Care-giving and Care-receiving
- Social ties are closely connected to health and
well-being - Emotion is intimately involved in critical
psychological processes that are impacted by age - Memory
- Learning
- Attention/Perception
- Emotional functioning may be relatively preserved
in normal aging - Versus physical abilities and cognitive skills)
- Skillful emotional regulation may be an important
component of late-life wisdom - Perspective-taking
- Reappraisal
- Moderation
- Emotional dysfunction is a prominent feature of
many dementing disorders
6Studying Emotion and Aging in the Laboratory
Directed Facial Actions
Emotional Memories
Films
Marital Interaction
7What Happens to Emotion With Age?
- Greater emotional control (Lawton, et al., 1992)
- Same or greater well-being (Stacey Gatz, 1991)
- Greater emotional understanding (Labouvie-Vief,
et al., 1989) - Greater emotional refinement (poignancy,
reminiscence Molinari Reichlin, 1996)
The classic view Old age is a time of
dampened, rigid, and flat emotionality (Banham,
1951 Jung, 1933 Looft, 1972)
8Sources of Pleasure and Conflict
9Emotional BehaviorsSame Amount Overall, But A
Shift in Kind
10Emotional Physiology Reduced Magnitude
11Summary Aging and Emotion--Loss, Gain, or Same?
12Emotional Expertise
Ebling Levenson (2003)
Method View video of 10 couples discussing a
marital problem for 3 minutes. Answer two
questions (1) Will they still be married five
years later (2) Rate their marital satisfaction
at the time of the taping on a 1-10 scale.
13Emotion and Dementia
14Social Neuroscience Approaches
Psychophysiological Same as damaged brains, but
using normal participants
15The social brain the usual anatomical suspects
- Ventromedial prefrontal cortex (green) social
decision-making, planning, inhibition - Amygdala (red) fear conditioning, processing
emotionally-relevant stimuli including social
stimuli social judgments approach/avoid
decisions - Right somatosensory cortex (blue) decoding
complex emotional expressions via simulation,
empathy - Insula (purple) processing bodily signals,
self-regulation
- Fusiform face area (green) face processing
- Cingulate (yellow) error monitoring, reward,
autonomic responses - Mirror neurons imitation, simulation, empathy
- Plus Visual association cortices, hypothalamus,
thalamus, brainstem
Bottom line Its a fronto-temporal world
16Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD)
Normal
- Characteristics
- Degenerative
- 15 of all dementias (often misdiagnosed)
- Onset before age 65
- Rapid progression
- Clear-cut anatomical markers
- Involvement of brain areas important for emotion
(e.g., amygdala, insula, temporal pole) - Changes in emotion, personality, socio-emotional
behavior precede gross cognitive changes
FTLD
17Change in Brain Morphology
Time 1
Time 2 (15 months later)
Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration
Primary Progressive Aphasia
18Loss of empathy in frontotemporal dementia
19Loss of Empathy and Emotional Understanding
(Werner et al., under review)
No differences in physiological response to films
20Emotional Understanding Neural Substrates
FTLD Patients Recognition of Emotions in Photos
Correlations with Brain Volumes
p lt .05
(Rosen et al, 2002)
21Loss of self in frontotemporal dementia
22Loss of self-conscious emotion (the secondary
startle reaction)
Frontotemporal Dementia
Normal Young Adults
23Primary and Secondary Startle Reactions (Smith et
al., under review)
No physiological or behavioral differences during
primary startle
N53 (30 FTLD, 23 Age-matched controls)
24Changing personality in frontotemporal dementia
25Change in PersonalityInterpersonal Adjective
Scales
Dominant
Dominant
Warm
Cold
Warm
Cold
Submissive
Submissive
Premorbid
Now
Rankin, K. P., Kramer, J. H., Mychack, P.,
Miller, B. L. (2003). Double dissociation of
social functioning in frontotemporal dementia.
Neurology, 60(2), 266-271.
26Problems with emotion regulation in
frontotemporal dementia
27Instructed Regulation versus Spontaneous
RegulationCan-do Is Not Do-do
Failure to down-regulate when warned
28Different dementiasDifferent effects on emotion
29Dissociation of Social and Cognitive Function
Frontotemporal Dementia
Alzheimers Disease
30Emotion and Aging Summary
- Emotions are central to human functioning
throughout the lifespan - Emotional functioning is generally preserved in
normal aging - Emotional functioning is severely altered in
certain dementias (FTLD, ALS) and relatively
preserved in others (early stages of AD)