Fearful Body Posture Tells Others: Run!
The brain's response to another person's
body language may help explain why humans are quite efficient
at fleeing from danger, according to researchers.
In a series of experiments, the
investigators found that when they showed men and women still
images of a person taking a fearful stance, it activated areas
of the brain involved in movement. The same was not true of images
of a "happy" body posture, which, compared with emotionally neutral
stances, enhanced activity only in visual centers of the brain.
In all cases, faces were blocked
out of the images in order to get at the specific effect of body
language. In the past, research has focused almost exclusively
on the face as the conveyor of human emotion, said lead study
author Dr. Beatrice de Gelder, of Harvard Medical School in Boston.
Her team's findings highlight the
importance of the whole body in expressing emotion, particularly
when it comes to fear. This makes evolutionary sense, de Gelder
explained in an interview, since it is in the best interest of
a person to quickly read, and act upon, the bodily expression
of fear in another person.
For the study, which is published
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, de Gelder
and her colleagues used the brain-imaging technique functional
MRI to monitor brain activity in seven adults while they were
shown still images of actors in various body postures -- making
either happy, fearful or emotionally neutral gestures.
Compared with the neutral postures
-- of someone combing his hair, for instance -- fearful stances
triggered greater activity in a number of brain areas involved
in processing emotion, and in regions associated with movement.
In other words, a fearful body
posture primes others to flee. "Due to this mechanism, people
are very efficient at running away," de Gelder said. Survival
is better served, according to the researcher, when a person immediately
"copies the body posture" of others who are expressing fear, rather
than standing around trying to assess the situation.
Beyond their relevance to evolution,
the study findings may also prove useful in the understanding
of brain disorders such as schizophrenia and autism, de Gelder
said.
Both of those disorders, she noted,
involve problems in expressing and reading emotion. Knowing how
emotional body language activates the brain could aid in understanding
or even treating these conditions, according to the researcher.
SOURCE: Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, November 23, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
Nov 16, 2004
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