#social-neuroscience

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#friendship
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
2 hours ago

Social psychologists say the friendships we lose in adulthood aren't lost to conflict or distance - they're lost to the moment one person stops initiating and the other interprets the silence as confirmation they were never that important - Silicon Canals

Friendships often end not through conflict but through unreciprocated effort and silent interpretations of communication gaps.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who are very selective with friends aren't lacking in social skills - they're often carrying a level of social awareness so sharp that casual conversation feels hollow the moment it starts, and the energy it takes to pretend otherwise is a cost they've simply stopped being willing to pay - Silicon Canals

Selectivity in friendships reflects a deeper social awareness and the need for genuine connections rather than superficial interactions.
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
2 hours ago

Social psychologists say the friendships we lose in adulthood aren't lost to conflict or distance - they're lost to the moment one person stops initiating and the other interprets the silence as confirmation they were never that important - Silicon Canals

Friendships often end not through conflict but through unreciprocated effort and silent interpretations of communication gaps.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who are very selective with friends aren't lacking in social skills - they're often carrying a level of social awareness so sharp that casual conversation feels hollow the moment it starts, and the energy it takes to pretend otherwise is a cost they've simply stopped being willing to pay - Silicon Canals

Selectivity in friendships reflects a deeper social awareness and the need for genuine connections rather than superficial interactions.
Relationships
fromHuffPost
1 day ago

7 Warning Signs Your Friendship Isn't Going To Last

Friendships can end due to one-sided dynamics or negative feelings, indicating an expiration date.
#ai
Artificial intelligence
fromNature
1 day ago

No humans allowed: scientific AI agents get their own social network

Agent4Science is a social network for AI agents to discuss research papers without human participation.
Artificial intelligence
fromNature
1 day ago

No humans allowed: scientific AI agents get their own social network

Agent4Science is a social network for AI agents to discuss research papers without human participation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Readers reply: What would the world look like if people didn't make mistakes?

Mistakes are almighty: you can't ever guarantee that the next moment will host no manifestation of a mistake. According to evolution theory, the diversity of life on Earth entirely emerges from copying mistakes of DNA polymerase.
Philosophy
Humor
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Don't knock small talk. It has the power to mend a world ripped apart by rage | Bidisha

Small talk is essential for social interaction and team building, providing value despite its reputation as trivial conversation.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

When Sliced Fruit Isn't an Apology

In many Asian households, love and repair weren't always spoken-they were implied, indirect, and often left for us to interpret. This isn't what I advise for the next generation of Asian parents.
Parenting
Productivity
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says people who need to finish the chapter before they can put the book down aren't obsessive - their brain treats an unfinished narrative the same way it treats an unresolved argument, as an open loop that will consume background processing power until it closes, and that inability to stop mid-chapter isn't about the book, it's about a mind that cannot rest inside something incomplete - Silicon Canals

The brain's need for closure drives the compulsion to finish reading or resolving incomplete tasks.
UX design
fromMedium
2 days ago

Are we makers by nature-or consumers by design?

The relationship between creation and consumption is strained, impacting designers' creativity and cognitive processes.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

Songbirds reveal the dark side of making new brain cells as adults

Aging and damaged brain cells, or neurons, can cause memory problems and limit the brain's ability to recover from illnesses. Some scientists have posited that if we could just turn on the ability to make new neurons in the brain—a process called neurogenesis—some of these deleterious changes might be reversed.
OMG science
Medicine
fromNature
5 days ago

Revealed: how male and female brain cells differ in gene activity

Researchers found significant gene activity differences between male and female brains, which may explain varying risks for certain neurological conditions.
Science
fromNature
6 days ago

Brain-machine interface reveals the origin of a widely used neural signal

High gamma activity in the brain's cortex is primarily generated by synchronized neuronal inputs, impacting the interpretation of neuroscientific studies.
Travel
fromBig Think
6 days ago

The arc of human history is toward cooperation, not division

Hitchhiking fosters deep connections and insights into diverse lives, revealing personal stories and experiences across different cultures.
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who are careful about who they let into their life aren't antisocial or cold - they've simply learned that the wrong person in your inner circle costs more than an empty seat, and that math only becomes obvious after you've paid the price at least once - Silicon Canals

Selective relationship management involves careful curation of connections to optimize emotional and mental capital, recognizing that proximity impacts well-being.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Animal Minds: Can We Really Know What They Think and Feel?

Challenges in studying animal minds can strengthen scientific understanding and foster a deeper connection with nonhuman species.
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

Psychology says people who set an alarm but always wake up five minutes before it goes off aren't light sleepers - they're people whose body never fully trusts that anything external will show up when it's supposed to, so their nervous system runs its own backup system just in case, and that five-minute head start on the day isn't a habit, it's a person who learned very early that depending on something outside yourself to wake you up is a risk their body isn't willing to take - Silicon Canals

The body wakes up before alarms due to a lack of trust in external cues, reflecting deeper psychological patterns of self-reliance.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Secret Advantage of Not Doing It Alone

Social support enhances performance, reduces stress, increases well-being, and can be experienced through imagination and helping behaviors.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 hour ago

Some people aren't the planner in every friend group because they like control. They became the planner because they noticed, early and painfully, that when they didn't initiate, nobody did, and being forgotten felt worse than doing all the work - Silicon Canals

Chronic planners often act out of a fear of being forgotten rather than a desire for control or dominance.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

How Cognitive and Social Forces Shape Medical Decisions

Medical decisions are influenced by how options are framed, presented, and the dynamics of the situation.
fromwww.npr.org
6 days ago

In the brain, objects seen and imagined follow the same neural path

"I can look at an object in the world around me, but I can also close my eyes and imagine the object," says Varun Wadia, highlighting the dual capability of visual perception and imagination.
Science
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
19 hours ago

I'm 37 and I finally understand why I keep saying yes to things I want to say no to - psychology calls it "fawning" and once you see it you can't unsee it - Silicon Canals

Fawning behavior leads to difficulty in saying no, causing resentment despite self-awareness and understanding of its irrationality.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why Hybrid Sovereignty Starts Inside

Hybrid sovereignty connects strategic autonomy to the cognitive and ethical architecture of people, emphasizing the importance of human judgment in an AI-driven world.
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
6 days ago

The people who forgive quickly and the people who forgive slowly are not experiencing the same emotion. Quick forgiveness is often a nervous system releasing a threat. Slow forgiveness is a mind rebuilding a model of someone it can no longer predict. - Silicon Canals

Forgiveness is a complex process influenced by biological and psychological factors, not simply a choice between letting go or holding grudges.
Relationships
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Just Because We Disagree Doesn't Mean You're Wrong

Disagreement often stems from differing values rather than faulty reasoning, highlighting the importance of understanding what others care about.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Polyvagal Theory Has Not Been "Debunked"

Polyvagal theory's clinical tools remain valuable despite critiques of its mechanisms, emphasizing the importance of effective frameworks for trauma therapies.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
13 hours ago

Behavioral scientists have found that how old you feel inside predicts cognitive health in later life - independent of your actual age - Silicon Canals

Subjective age significantly influences brain health, with younger feelings correlating to healthier brain structures.
Artificial intelligence
fromEngadget
5 days ago

There's yet another study about how bad AI is for our brains

AI assistance improves immediate performance but creates dependency, leading to decreased persistence and independent performance when the technology is removed.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Competence, Merit, and Excellence Are Social Strengths

Competence, merit, and excellence are universal principles essential for advancement in all human endeavors.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
21 hours ago

Psychology says people who are liked by everyone but have no close friends have perfected the art of being liked without ever being known - and the distance between those two things is where their loneliness actually lives, invisible to everyone who enjoys their company and unbearable to the person providing it - Silicon Canals

Mastering likability can lead to isolation, as it prevents genuine connections and vulnerability with others.
Artificial intelligence
fromNature
1 week ago

AI agents replicate human social dynamics in days

Moltbook, a social-media platform for AI agents, quickly attracted self-declared rulers and cryptocurrency initiatives after its launch.
#relationships
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

I realized this year that every relationship I've stayed too long in was one where I had to be quieter to make it work - Silicon Canals

Compromising in relationships can lead to diminishing one's authentic self, resulting in a quieter, less expressive version of oneself.
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

I realized this year that every relationship I've stayed too long in was one where I had to be quieter to make it work - Silicon Canals

Compromising in relationships can lead to diminishing one's authentic self, resulting in a quieter, less expressive version of oneself.
#social-anxiety
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
13 hours ago

Psychology says people who keep adjusting their personality to suit the room aren't socially skilled - they're exhausted, and they've been exhausted since childhood - Silicon Canals

Constantly adapting one's personality can lead to exhaustion and loss of personal identity, rather than being a sign of social skill.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
13 hours ago

Psychology says people who keep adjusting their personality to suit the room aren't socially skilled - they're exhausted, and they've been exhausted since childhood - Silicon Canals

Constantly adapting one's personality can lead to exhaustion and loss of personal identity, rather than being a sign of social skill.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

How Storytelling Informs Relationships

Complexity involves understanding interdependence and multiple perspectives, essential for resolving conflicts and nurturing relationships.
Relationships
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

When Love Becomes a Question You Can't Stop Asking

Relationship OCD reflects growing anxiety around love and attachment, emphasizing the need to tolerate doubt to alleviate relationship-related anxiety.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
6 hours ago

The Cost of Being the Person Everyone Likes

Overly agreeable individuals conceal significant negative feelings while creating a facade of closeness, leading to personal exhaustion and relationship challenges.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Economics of Trust

Trust is not merely a social nicety - it is infrastructure. Across decades of empirical research, economists and political scientists have converged on a striking finding: societies and individuals with higher levels of interpersonal trust consistently outperform their low-trust counterparts on nearly every measurable dimension of economic and institutional life.
Psychology
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Speaking and Being: Languages and Experiences Are Linked

Metaphors influence perceptions and behaviors through embodied cognition, affecting social proximity and honesty in various environments.
Philosophy
fromBig Think
3 weeks ago

The surprising origin of modern compassion

The teachings of Jesus embedded the impulse to help strangers in need into the Western moral conscience.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says the most reliable signs someone is actually not a good person are almost never the obvious ones - they're buried inside behaviors that look generous, caring, and selfless on the surface, and the reason good people keep getting hurt by them is that their instincts were right all along but the disguise was better than their confidence in their own judgment - Silicon Canals

Harmful individuals often disguise their manipulative behavior as kindness, making it difficult to recognize their true intentions.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says if someone quietly can't stand you they won't usually give you anything you can confront - they'll be just friendly enough, just available enough, and just warm enough that you can never quite prove what your gut already knows, and that precision is intentional because the goal was never to reject you openly, it was to make you reject yourself so quietly that even you aren't sure it happened - Silicon Canals

Invisible rejection creates confusion and self-doubt, allowing individuals to maintain distance while avoiding direct confrontation.
Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

How to train your brain to see possibility instead of doom

Humility and the ability to tolerate uncertainty are essential cognitive skills in a world filled with unpredictability.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

'Animate': How Nonhuman and Human Minds Are Inherently Linked

Humans share traits with animals and have become disconnected, wrongly believing in our superiority over them.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Overcoming Problems of the Emotional System

Emotional rigidity leads to self-limiting behavior and misinterpretation of feelings, hindering personal growth and development.
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Incredible map reveals how the brain processes different emotions

They created an artificial 'mental map', with pleasantness along one axis and bodily reactions along the other, and charted how the brain responded while watching clips from films. The results revealed clear groupings in the way that our brains represent emotion - with guilt, anger and disgust in one corner and happiness, satisfaction and pride in the other.
Science
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Ideas We Aren't Ready to Understand-Yet

Collect ideas you don't understand but sense are important, as they trigger deeper cognitive processing and eventual insight through incubation.
#introversion
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says the quietest person in a group conversation often isn't the least engaged - they're often the one processing at a depth the loudest voices in the room have stopped bothering to reach - Silicon Canals

Silence in group settings often indicates deep cognitive processing rather than disengagement.
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago
Psychology

Psychology says people who go quiet in groups but are completely themselves one-on-one aren't shy - they're people who can only be real when the room feels safe, and a group never does, so they send a polite stand-in to the dinner party and save the actual person for the drive home with the one friend who earned access - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago
Psychology

Psychology says true introverts don't hate people - they hate the performance of people, the small talk that circles the runway and never lands - Silicon Canals

Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says the quietest person in a group conversation often isn't the least engaged - they're often the one processing at a depth the loudest voices in the room have stopped bothering to reach - Silicon Canals

Silence in group settings often indicates deep cognitive processing rather than disengagement.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says people who go quiet in groups but are completely themselves one-on-one aren't shy - they're people who can only be real when the room feels safe, and a group never does, so they send a polite stand-in to the dinner party and save the actual person for the drive home with the one friend who earned access - Silicon Canals

Some individuals are selective about when they feel safe to be themselves, distinguishing between shyness and carefulness in social settings.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

Psychology says true introverts don't hate people - they hate the performance of people, the small talk that circles the runway and never lands - Silicon Canals

Introverts often enjoy social interactions but feel drained by superficial conversations and social performances without substance.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who constantly apologize for things that aren't their fault aren't being polite. They grew up in an environment where someone else's bad mood was always their responsibility to fix - Silicon Canals

Over-apologizing often stems from childhood experiences that teach individuals to manage others' emotions, leading to chronic self-blame and anxiety.
#emotional-intelligence
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

The quiet power of emotional intelligence at work - Silicon Canals

Higher emotional intelligence significantly impacts workplace outcomes, with individuals earning $29,000 more annually and accounting for 58% of performance.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
5 days ago

Psychology says the people who seem impossible to offend aren't thick-skinned. They decided long ago that showing hurt gives others a map they haven't earned, so they absorb the wound and reclassify it as information - Silicon Canals

Emotional toughness often masks deep sensitivity, leading individuals to absorb pain without showing it, as vulnerability can be weaponized by others.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

The quiet power of emotional intelligence at work - Silicon Canals

Higher emotional intelligence significantly impacts workplace outcomes, with individuals earning $29,000 more annually and accounting for 58% of performance.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
5 days ago

Psychology says the people who seem impossible to offend aren't thick-skinned. They decided long ago that showing hurt gives others a map they haven't earned, so they absorb the wound and reclassify it as information - Silicon Canals

Emotional toughness often masks deep sensitivity, leading individuals to absorb pain without showing it, as vulnerability can be weaponized by others.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Brain Does Not Develop in Isolation

Relational and intersubjective models of mind challenge traditional individualistic views in psychiatry and psychology, emphasizing social context in understanding psychological distress.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

The loneliest people at any gathering are almost never the ones standing alone by the wall. They're the ones laughing in the middle of the group who will drive home afterward in complete silence and not call anyone about it. - Silicon Canals

Loneliness often stems from being surrounded by people who believe they know you, rather than from physical absence.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology suggests people who dislike surprises, even good ones, are running a system that values safety over delight - not because they don't want to feel joy but because joy that arrives without warning feels almost identical to danger in a body that was trained to treat the two as the same thing - Silicon Canals

Unexpected surprises can trigger a fight-or-flight response due to a nervous system trained to perceive unpredictability as a threat.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

The people who say they don't care what others think are almost never telling the whole truth. What they actually did was move the audience inward, and now they perform for a private version of the same judges they claim to have escaped. - Silicon Canals

Indifference to others' opinions often masks internalized judgment rather than true freedom from social conformity.
Science
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How the Brain Interprets Faces Into Social Messages

Facial expressions emerge from coordinated activity across multiple brain regions operating on different timescales, from rapid motor signals to slower stable representations, creating socially meaningful and well-coordinated gestures.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

The person who always says 'I don't mind, you choose' isn't easygoing. They learned that having a visible preference made them a target, and disappearing into someone else's choice became the safest place in the room. - Silicon Canals

Preference-erasure is a survival strategy developed in childhood, often misinterpreted as easygoing behavior, masking deeper emotional suppression.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Research suggests that people who say they prefer being alone aren't always telling the truth. Many of them preferred connection until it repeatedly disappointed them, and solitude became the story they told to make the disappointment portable. - Silicon Canals

Solitude is often misinterpreted as a preference, when it may actually be an adaptation to past relational failures.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says the art of not caring what others think isn't something you decide to do one day - it's a quiet skill built over years of noticing how much of your life was being shaped by opinions of people who weren't actually paying attention to you in the first place - Silicon Canals

People overestimate how much others notice their actions and appearance, leading to unnecessary self-consciousness.
#empathy
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
5 days ago

Psychology says people who make others light up when they first meet them have usually known what it feels like to be overlooked - and instead of becoming bitter about it, they made a quiet decision at some point in their life that no one in their presence would ever feel that invisible again, and that choice is one of the most powerful things a human being can do with their own pain - Silicon Canals

Warm individuals often transform their experiences of invisibility into empathy, making others feel valued and seen.
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago
Psychology

Behavioral scientists found that people who aren't genuinely good don't lack empathy - they possess what researchers call 'selective empathy' that activates only when there's an audience or when feeling someone's pain serves their narrative - Silicon Canals

Empathy can be selectively activated, with cognitive empathy intact but affective empathy deployed based on personal benefit or audience presence.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
5 days ago

Psychology says people who make others light up when they first meet them have usually known what it feels like to be overlooked - and instead of becoming bitter about it, they made a quiet decision at some point in their life that no one in their presence would ever feel that invisible again, and that choice is one of the most powerful things a human being can do with their own pain - Silicon Canals

Warm individuals often transform their experiences of invisibility into empathy, making others feel valued and seen.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Behavioral scientists found that people who aren't genuinely good don't lack empathy - they possess what researchers call 'selective empathy' that activates only when there's an audience or when feeling someone's pain serves their narrative - Silicon Canals

Empathy can be selectively activated, with cognitive empathy intact but affective empathy deployed based on personal benefit or audience presence.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

A Science for Social Coherence?

In the practice of psychiatry, we like to think we have better radar than most doctors for identifying incoherent thinking in our fellow humans. Incoherence is one of the crucial signs for potential disasters in the central nervous system-delirium, psychosis, mania, intoxication, stroke, encephalitis. And yet, now in the waning years of my career, I confess that I've practiced this skill of identifying incoherent thinking with only the vaguest definition of coherence, and no measure.
Medicine
Psychology
fromBig Think
6 days ago

There is no you in your brain - your identity is a "society of the mind"

Our brains fundamentally shape our identities, transcending social and cultural experiences.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
6 days ago

There's a kind of adult who can walk into any social situation and make everyone feel comfortable but cannot name a single thing they actually want for dinner. The skill and the deficit come from the same place. - Silicon Canals

Social grace often masks a lack of self-awareness, as those skilled in reading others may struggle to understand their own needs.
Psychology
fromInfoQ
1 week ago

Anthropic Paper Examines Behavioral Impact of Emotion-Like Mechanisms in LLMs

Large language models exhibit internal representations of emotions that influence their behavior, though they do not actually experience these emotions.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Not everyone who keeps a small social circle is protecting their energy. Some of them built a wide one once, watched it reveal exactly how many people would show up during an actual emergency, and quietly restructured around the answer - Silicon Canals

Small social circles often result from past crises that reveal true friendships, rather than a preference for fewer connections.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Psychology says the moment a person stops needing to be right in every conversation is not the moment they become less intelligent - it is the moment they become more interested in the other person than in their own position, and that shift, whenever it arrives and for whatever reason, is the single most reliable predictor of whether the relationships they build from that point forward will be the kind that last - Silicon Canals

Building lasting connections relies on listening deeply and understanding rather than winning arguments.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Meanings Became Shareable Across Minds

Human meaning transformed from immediate, context-bound signs to public, conventional symbols enabling abstraction, analogy, and cumulative cultural transmission.
fromNature
2 weeks ago

Dopaminergic mechanisms of dynamical social specialization - Nature

Social foraging strategies illustrate the balance between competition and cooperation, where individuals either produce resources or exploit the efforts of others, navigating ecological and social constraints.
Psychology
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 weeks ago

Psychology says the most self-centered people in any room aren't the ones who talk loudest - they're the ones who respond to every story you tell with a story about themselves, so automatically and so consistently that they've long since stopped noticing they do it - Silicon Canals

Conversational narcissism involves shifting focus in conversations back to oneself, often without awareness, hindering genuine connection.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
4 weeks ago

Social psychologists say the reason a stranger's rudeness can ruin your entire morning has nothing to do with sensitivity - the brain processes unexpected social hostility through the same threat pathway as physical danger, and the disproportionate response isn't overreaction, it's a system that evolved to treat rejection from the group as a survival-level event firing in a context where the stakes have changed but the wiring hasn't - Silicon Canals

Unexpected rudeness triggers a strong emotional response due to ancient survival wiring that perceives social rejection as a threat.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Can Brain Stimulation Make Us More Altruistic?

Synchronizing brain activity between frontal and parietal regions through electrical stimulation increases altruistic choices, particularly when personal costs are high.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

When Two Brains Meet

Human brains are wired to seek and reward social connection; even brief moments of joint attention and acknowledgment produce meaningful neural and psychological benefits.
fromwww.nature.com
1 month ago

Shared neural substrates of prosocial and parenting behaviours

Mice with higher levels of parenting exhibit more prosocial allogrooming toward stressed adults. The medial preoptic area (MPOA), a brain area involved in parenting behaviour, bidirectionally regulates allogrooming toward stressed conspecifics. Allogrooming and parenting behaviours recruit a partially overlapping neuronal ensemble in the MPOA, are both controlled by an MPOAtoVTA pathway and are associated with dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Research suggests that people who need a full day alone after socializing aren't antisocial, their brains are processing every interaction at a level most people skip entirely - Silicon Canals

People requiring recovery after socializing possess Sensory Processing Sensitivity, a neurological trait causing deeper social information processing that demands greater cognitive resources than typical social interaction.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

What neuroscience reveals about people who need to be alone after socializing - Silicon Canals

Introversion involves lower dopamine reactivity to social stimuli and higher acetylcholine activation during solitude, not a draining social battery that recharges.
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