Abstract

Studies showed that introversion is the strongest personality trait related to perceived social isolation (loneliness), which can predict various complications beyond objective isolation such as living alone. Lonely individuals are more likely to resort to social media for instantaneous comfort, but it is not a perpetual solution. Largely negative implications including poorer interpersonal relationship and depression were reported due to excessive social media usage. Conversational task is an established intervention to improve verbal communication, cognitive and behavioral adaptation among lonely individuals. Despite that behavioral benefits have been reported, it is unclear if they are accompanied by objective benefits underlying physiological changes. Here, we investigate the physiological signals from 28 healthy individuals during a conversational task. Participants were ranked by trait extraversion, where greater introversion is associated with increased susceptibility to perceived social isolation as compared to participants with greater extraversion as controls. We found that introverts had a greater tendency to be neurotic, and these participants also exhibited significant differences in task-related electrodermal activity (EDA), heart rate (HR) and HR variability (HRV) as compared to controls. Notably, resting state HRV among individuals susceptible to perceived loneliness was below the healthy thresholds established in literature. Conversational task with a stranger significantly increased HRV among individuals susceptible to isolation up to levels as seen in controls. Since HRV is also elevated by physical exercise and administration of oxytocin hormone (one form of therapy for behavioral isolation), conversational therapy among introverts could potentially confer physiological benefits to ameliorate social isolation and loneliness. Our findings also suggest that although the recent pandemic has changed how people are interacting typically, we should maintain a healthy dose of social interaction innovatively.

Highlights

  • Social relationships are crucial for well-being [1] as human societies are built on a dynamic and complex system with frequent interactions between individuals [2]

  • The personality scores related to extraversion between both groups were significantly different in both Eysenck’s Personality Inventory (EPI) (t(26) = 12.311, p < 0.001) and Big Five Inventory (BFI) (t(26) = 6.889, p < 0.001)

  • We found significant negative correlation between extraversion and neuroticism in both EPI and BFI tests, supporting theories which associate introversion to loneliness. fMRI study revealed that loneliness is positively correlated with neuroticism and negatively related to extraversion trait, and these relationships were reflected in changes of gray matter volume in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [38]

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Summary

Introduction

Social relationships are crucial for well-being [1] as human societies are built on a dynamic and complex system with frequent interactions between individuals [2]. Living alone, having few social network ties and paucity of social contact are common markers of social isolation [3,4]. Social isolation is a risk factor for depressive symptoms in early adolescence [5]. Both objective isolation and loneliness (perceived isolation) were associated.

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