Being surrounded by people who don't see the world quite like you do increases your risk of feeling lonely, even if you're friends with them.
to view brain activity while the students watched 14 video clips.
The content was intended to be engaging enough to minimize differences in data arising from participants' minds wandering during the task. The topics in the videos ranged from sentimental music videos to depictions of parties and sporting events., a self-report to measure their feelings of loneliness and social isolation, and were divided into two groups based on results: lonely and"nonlonely" .
Baek and team analyzed how 214 different regions of the brain responded over time to stimuli in the videos, comparing activity between different individuals in each brain region to see how similar or different their responses were. While nonlonely people were more or less similar neurologically speaking, individuals with high levels of loneliness, regardless of how many friends they had, were more likely to have unique brain responses.
"Our results suggest that lonely individuals process the world in a way that is dissimilar to their peers and to each other," Baek and colleaguesParticularly, differences in neural responses between lonely people and their peers were clear in
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