Abstract
According to terror management theory, self-esteem serves as a buffer against existential anxiety. This proposition is well supported empirically, but its neuronal underpinnings are poorly understood. Therefore, in the present neuroimaging study, it was tested how self-esteem affects neural circuitry activation when death-related material is processed. Consistent with previous findings, the bilateral insula responded less to death-related stimuli relative to similarly unpleasant, but death-unrelated sentences, an effect that might reflect a decrease in the sense of oneself in the face of existential threat. In anterior parts of the insula, this 'deactivation' effect was more pronounced for high self-esteem individuals, suggesting that the insula might be of core importance to understanding the anxiety-buffering effect of self-esteem. In addition, low self-esteem participants responded with enhanced activation to death-related over unpleasant stimuli in bilateral ventrolateral prefrontal and medial orbitofrontal cortex, suggesting that regulating death-related thoughts might be more effortful to these individuals. Together, this suggests that the anxiety-buffering effect of self-esteem might be implemented in the brain in the form of both insula-dependent awareness mechanisms and prefrontal cortex-dependent regulation mechanisms.
Author supplied keywords
- *Death Anxiety
- *Neuroanatomie
- *Neuroanatomy
- *Selbstwertgefühl
- *Self Esteem
- *Todesangst
- Affective Valence
- Angst
- Anxiety
- Cerebral Blood Flow
- Death Attitudes
- Death and Dying
- Einstellungen zum Tod
- Emotionale Valenz
- Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Funktionelle Magnetresonanztomographie
- Motivation & Emotion
- Motivation und Emotion
- Personality Traits & Processes
- Persönlichkeitseigenschaften und Persönlichkeitspr
- Terror Management Theory
- Terror-Management-Theorie
- Tod und Sterben
- Zerebrale Durchblutung
- self-esteem; existential fear; terror management t
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Klackl, J., Jonas, E., & Kronbichler, M. (2014). Existential neuroscience: Self-esteem moderates neuronal responses to mortality-related stimuli TT - Existentielle Neurowissenschaften: Das Selbstwertgefühl beeinflusst neuronale Reaktionen auf mortalitätsbezogene Reize. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 9(11), 1754–1761. Retrieved from http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=pdx&AN=0289637&site=ehost-live
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