Abstract

It remains an unsolved conundrum how social presence affects the neural processes involved in adaptive situation-specific decision-making mechanisms. To investigate this question, brain potential changes via electroencephalography (EEG) and skin conductance responses (SCR) were taken within this study, while participants were exposed to pre-rated pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant pictures, which they had to rate in terms of their perceived arousal. Crucially, they had to—in respective runs—do this alone and in the presence of a significant other. Contrasting respective event-related potentials (ERPs) revealed significantly more negative going potentials peaking at 708 ms post stimulus onset at mid-frontal electrode locations (around FPz and AFz), when participants were exposed to neutral pictures while in the presence of a significant other. SCR results demonstrate higher states of arousal in the presence of a significant other regardless of picture emotion category. Self-reported arousal turned out to be highest in response to neutral pictures within the significant other condition, whereas in the alone condition in response to the pleasant pictures. In light of existing literature on social aspects and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), the ERP finding in the significant other condition, while rating emotionally neutral pictures, is interpreted as reflecting heightened ACC activation, which is supported by electrode locations showing significant brain activity differences as well as by source localization results. Neutral pictures are inherently ambiguous, and the current results indicate the presence of another person to change the way one processes, perceives, and acts on them. This is in support for theories proposing the ACC to be part of a larger signal-specification network that gauges relevant stimuli for adequate execution of control.

Highlights

  • Social presence alters the environmental circumstances that an individual is exposed to as well as their internal states

  • Contrasting the respective event-related potentials (ERPs), data processing revealed significantly more negative going potentials at the selected central frontal electrode locations when participants were exposed to the neutral pictures while with a significant other versus when alone

  • The results of the current study show that social presence, in form of the presence of a significant other, has an impact on neural activity related to affective processing, reflected in human brain activation and skin conductance responses (SCR), as well as in subjectively perceived arousal, mirrored in self-report

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Summary

Introduction

Social presence alters the environmental circumstances that an individual is exposed to as well as their internal states It has an impact on human perception and situation-specific decision-making, especially since the costs of mistakes are often hypothesized to be higher when made in front of conspecifics than when alone [1,2,3]. In order to determine the most beneficial course of action in social presence, adaptive situation-specific decision-making is needed, as it is of vital significance to comprehend others’ affective and cognitive states as well as their resulting intentions [4].

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