Abstract

A positive view of oneself is important for a healthy lifestyle. Self-protection mechanisms such as suppressing negative self-related information help us to maintain a positive view of ourselves. This is of special relevance when, for instance, a negative test result threatens our positive self-view. To date, it is not clear which brain areas support self-protective mechanisms under self-threat. In the present functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study the participants (N = 46) received a (negative vs. positive) performance test feedback before entering the scanner. In the scanner, the participants were instructed to ascribe personality traits either to themselves or to a famous other. Our results showed that participants responded slower to negative self-related traits compared to positive self-related traits. High self-esteem individuals responded slower to negative traits compared to low self-esteem individuals following a self-threat. This indicates that high self-esteem individuals engage more in self-enhancing strategies after a threat by inhibiting negative self-related information more successfully than low self-esteem individuals. This behavioral pattern was mirrored in the fMRI data as dACC correlated positively with trait self-esteem. Generally, ACC activation was attenuated under threat when participants evaluated self-relevant traits and even more for negative self-related traits. We also found that activation in the ACC was negatively correlated with response times, indicating that greater activation of the ACC is linked to better access (faster response) to positive self-related traits and to impaired access (slower response) to negative self-related traits. These results confirm the ACC function as important in managing threatened self-worth but indicate differences in trait self-esteem levels. The fMRI analyses also revealed a decrease in activation within the left Hippocampus and the right thalamus under threat. This indicates that a down-regulation of activation in these regions might also serve as coping mechanism in dealing with self-threat.

Highlights

  • Individuals generally strive for a positive self-view and use all kinds of strategies to protect it [1,2]

  • The results revealed a significant main effect of trait self-esteem (b = 7.95, t43 = 7.35, p = .000), which was driven by a significant interaction between the two predictors trait self-esteem and feedback reflecting that state self-esteem decreased after receiving a negative feedback compared to positive feedback but only for low self-esteem individuals (t43 = 2,47, p = .018)

  • We found a greater activation in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) for self- rather than other-related traits

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Summary

Introduction

Individuals generally strive for a positive self-view and use all kinds of strategies to protect it [1,2] These self-protective strategies will be activated when specific events threaten to impair a positive self-view. Such a threat may be a negative feedback concerning academic competence, social skills, or interpersonal relationships [3]. The mnemic neglect model proposes that negative self-related information is cognitively avoided [5] and less readily accessible from memory [6] than positive self-related information. Positive self-related information is more (i.e. faster) retrieved from memory than negative self-related information [7]

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