Proximity within adolescent peer networks predicts neural similarity during affective experience

Male Brain Mapping Adolescent adolescent development emotion Brain Friends Original Research – Neuroscience Magnetic Resonance Imaging Peer Group Affect affect Humans Female Interpersonal Relations relationships neural similarity
DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsae072 Publication Date: 2024-10-16T12:21:46Z
ABSTRACT
Abstract Individuals befriend others who are similar to them. One important source of similarity in relationships is similarity in felt emotion. In the present study, we used novel methods to assess whether greater similarity in the multivoxel brain representation of affective stimuli was associated with adolescents’ proximity within real-world school-based social networks. We examined dyad-level neural similarity within a set of brain regions associated with the representation of affect including the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), amygdala, insula, and temporal pole. Greater proximity was associated with greater vmPFC neural similarity during pleasant and neutral experiences. Moreover, we used unsupervised clustering on social networks to identify groups of friends and observed that individuals from the same (versus different) friend groups were more likely to have greater vmPFC neural similarity during pleasant and negative experiences. These findings suggest that similarity in the multivoxel brain representation of affect may play an important role in adolescent friendships.
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