每日英语:When Social Skills Are A Warning
An uncle starts believing all your sarcastic comments. Or a kindhearted friend never understands anymore how you feel. These people may not just be momentarily off. Recent research indicates they may be exhibiting early signals that something is going awry in their brains.
momentarily:随时地,暂时地 awry:错误的,扭曲的
Changes in social behavior, such as difficulty detecting insincere comments or feeling empathy, can be a window into our neurological health, scientists say. That is because how we interact with other people is one of the more complex functions the brain must perform. It requires a symphony of neurons firing throughout the brain and working together in networks so that we can detect, decode and interpret social signals. Deterioration in social functioning can begin even while executive functions like planning and organizing remain intact during the early stages of mental disorders.
neurological:神经学的 symphony:交响曲,谐声 intact:完整的,原封不动的
Recognizing social changes that previously might have been shrugged off could allow for earlier diagnosis of a disorder and treatment, doctors say. It also could give families more time to prepare for long-term care.
diagnosis:诊断
With some childhood conditions, like autism or attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, social problems are one of the primary characteristics of the disorder. In other conditions in which social problems aren't the main symptoms, including dementia, depression and schizophrenia, early clues may come from changes to a person's normal personality, such as becoming less friendly, understanding or attentive, or more paranoid.
autism:孤独症,自闭症 dementia:痴呆 schizophrenia:精神分裂症
paranoid:偏执
'Whenever we see someone with an emotional or social symptom we always say, 'What's going on in the brain?'' says Katherine Rankin, a neurology professor at the University of California, San Francisco. Dr. Rankin and other scientists at UCSF, Stanford University and other institutions are studying the underlying neurobiology of social behavior. They are seeking to understand how these neural networks function normally and how changes in the anatomical structures and functioning can shed light on the progression of disease.
neurology:神经学
Social peculiarities can be subtle or drastic, ranging from a lack of interest in spending time with other people to problems reading social etiquette and emotionally inappropriate behaviors. Other social deficits that could signal a problem include the inabilities to focus attention on what other people are noticing or to imagine what another person is thinking.
peculiarities:怪癖 drastic:猛烈的,激烈的 etiquette:礼节,礼仪
Researchers believe there are several networks made up of different brain parts communicating with one another that are critical to social behavior. Some networks act as emotional brakes and others as the gas. Everyone has a different balance of these networks, which contributes to our personalities, emotions and behaviors. But with disease, the parts of the brain or how they communicate with other areas can be dramatically disrupted.
People are unlikely to observe social changes in themselves. So it is often up to family members to report their concerns to a doctor, says Dr. Rankin. She recommends people over the age of 40 or 50 see a neurologist if they experience changes in social or emotional functioning, or language or memory problems. An evaluation for an adult might include a physical examination, questions about changes in mood and activity levels, and assessments of cognitive functioning. For a child, there may also be questions about developmental milestones.
Dr. Rankin says the family of an older man she treated recently brought him in for an evaluation after watching him eat. During meals, the man would finish all the food on his plate, then pick it up and begin licking. It turned out the man had frontotemporal dementia, damage to the frontal lobe of the brain, for which he is now taking medication to treat symptoms, she says.
One critical brain pathway is called the ventral-salience network, which filters incoming information for that which is personally important. The network appears to be significant in helping determine people's emotional awareness. It also helps them evaluate the potential for social punishment. Then, the task-control network tells the brain to pay attention to the important information and to process it. The semantic-appraisal network adds our emotional interpretation to the situation. Together, these networks and others help us understand the context for social or emotional situations, say researchers.
When one or more of the networks go awry, we often lose the ability to empathize, which is one of the most complex social behaviors, says Dr. Rankin, who treats and studies dementia patients. To truly empathize, we need to correctly read meaningful emotional information and to figure out what an appropriate response is, which sometimes might not match what the other person is feeling, she says.
People with autism and schizophrenia tend to have difficulty with empathy. Stanford University researchers have suggested that a lack of response to emotionally meaningful information in the insula, a brain region at the hub of the salience network, can lead to a cascade of effects that result in inappropriate emotional displays.
Lucina Uddin, a cognitive neuroscientist at Stanford, and her colleagues are now studying whether brain imaging of this network can serve as a biological marker of autism in kids. 'The answer looks like yes,' says Dr. Uddin, who plans to publish the research soon.
The salience detection network also may go awry in anxiety, schizophrenia and other conditions, says Dr. Uddin. In anxiety, too much environmental stimuli registers in the brain as important and thus becomes overwhelming. People with schizophrenia may have difficulty figuring out what to attend to.
The ability to detect and understand insincerity is another basic social deficit that can occur with disease. In a study published last year in the journal Cortex, Dr. Rankin and her colleagues studied the ability to detect sarcasm in 102 patients who had been diagnosed with four progressive diseases that lead to memory loss: frontotemporal dementia, Alzheimer's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and vascular-cognitive impairment. They compared the results with those of 77 healthy older people. Detecting such insincere forms of communication require many brain functions, including the ability to read emotion, see the world from another person's perspective and understand others' intentions.
In the study, participants viewed 16 videos in which they watched clips of people interacting in which some lied and others were sarcastic. All participants were able to understand sincere comments, but patients with frontotemporal dementia had trouble understanding lies and sarcasm. The other patients' ability to understand depended on the severity of their disease.
Bradford Dickerson, a neurology professor at Harvard Medical School, and colleagues have shown in studies that the size of certain parts of the brain important to emotional processing is associated with how many friends we have. 'More connected individuals might be better equipped to perceive social cues like facial expression' and might derive more positive experience from social interaction, writes Dr. Dickerson in a recent paper
每日英语:When Social Skills Are A Warning的更多相关文章
- 每日英语:Teens Are Still Developing Empathy Skills
The teen years are often fraught with door-slamming, eye-rolling and seeming insensitivity, even by ...
- 每日英语:Bosses May Use Social Media to Discriminate Against Job Seekers
Many companies regularly look up job applicants online as part of the hiring process. A new study su ...
- 每日英语:Don't Call Us Bossy
[Confident girls are often called the other B-word, and it can keep them from reaching their full po ...
- 每日英语:Proactive Advice for Dealing With Grief: Seek Out New Experiences
When her husband died of cancer 10 years ago, Becky Aikman says she experienced grief and adapted to ...
- 每日英语:China's Bigger Innovation Problem
Last month's Third Plenum meeting of Chinese leaders seemed to signal Beijing's intention to experim ...
- 每日英语:The Delicate Protocol Of Hugging
I'm not a hugger. When I see a registered personal-space invader coming my way at a party, the music ...
- 每日英语:Tech Firms Flock to Vietnam
Opening up a Korean restaurant among the rice fields and limestone karsts north of Hanoi might seem ...
- 每日英语:China's Bad Earth
In Dapu, a rain-drenched rural outpost in the heart of China's grain basket, a farmer grows crops th ...
- 每日英语:Who Ruined The Humanities?
You've probably heard the baleful reports. The number of college students majoring in the humanities ...
随机推荐
- XML 简单介绍
先附上一张XML 大概图:详解见博客内容. 一.定义 XML(EXtensible Markup Language) :可扩展标记语言. 设计的用途:用来描述,存储,传输数据信息. 二.特色 1.单纯 ...
- sql表值参数
using System;using System.Collections;using System.Collections.Specialized;using System.Data;using S ...
- C# 解决无法识别的属性 configProtectionProvider
在使用.Net自身提供的加密本配置文件后再用System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["key"]获取值时会出现“ ...
- LIBSVM与LIBLINEAR
对于多分类问题以及核函数的选取,以下经验规则可以借鉴: 如果如果特征数远远大于样本数的情况下,使用线性核就可以了. 如果特征数和样本数都很大,例如文档分类,一般使用线性核, LIBLINEAR比LIB ...
- Python——管理属性(1)
管理属性 这里将展开介绍前面提到的[属性拦截]技术.包含下面内容: [1]__getattr__和__setattr__方法.把没有定义的属性获取和全部的属性赋值指向通用的处理器方法 [2]__get ...
- [IDEA]IntelliJ IDEA 报 This license BIG3CLIK6F has been cancelled 错误
JetBrains 最近封杀了lanyus提供的序列号,用的人多了,自然会引起JetBrains的注意. 在激活时,会先在本地做一次验证,然后会把注册码发送到JetBrains的账号服务器上accou ...
- JS实现的MAP结构数据
Array.prototype.remove = function(s) { for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++) { if (s == this[i]) ...
- Java中字符串相等与大小比較
在C++中,两个字符串比較的代码能够为: (string1==string2) 但在java中,这个代码即使在两个字符串全然同样的情况下也会返回false Java中必须使用string1.equal ...
- 删除android ScrollView边界阴影方法
XML文件中添加以下方法: android:fadingEdge=”none” 或者,代码中设置为false即可 ScrollView.setHorizontalFadingEdgeEna ...
- Decorator [ˈdekəreɪtə(r)] 修饰器/装饰器 -- 装饰模式
装饰模式 -- 原先没有,后期添加的属性和方法 修饰器(Decorator)是一个函数,用来修饰类的行为.这是ES7的一个提案,目前Babel转码器已经支持. 需要先安装一个插件: npm insta ...