Inagaki, T. K., Hazlett, L. I., & Andreescu, C. (2019). Opioids and
social bonding: Effect of naltrexone on feelings of social connection
and ventral striatum activity to close others. Journal of Experimental
Psychology: General; http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xge0000674
Abstract:
Close social bonds are critical to immediate and long-term well-being.
However, the neurochemical mechanisms by which we remain connected to
our closest loved ones are not well understood. Opioids have long been
theorized to contribute to social bonding via their actions on the
brain. But feelings of social connection toward one’s own close others
and direct comparisons of ventral striatum (VS) activity in response to
close others and strangers, a neural correlate of social bonding, have
not been explored. Therefore, the current clinical trial examined
whether opioids causally affect neural and experiential signatures of
social bonding. Eighty participants were administered naltrexone (n =
40), an opioid antagonist that blocks natural opioid processing, or
placebo (n = 40) before completing a functional MRI scan where they
viewed images of their close others and individuals they had not seen
before (i.e., strangers). Feelings of social connection to the close
others and physical symptoms commonly experienced when taking naltrexone
were also collected. In support of hypotheses, naltrexone (vs. placebo)
reduced feelings of social connection toward the close others (e.g.,
family, friends, romantic partners). Furthermore, naltrexone (vs.
placebo) reduced left VS activity in response to images of the same
close others, but did not alter left VS activity to strangers. Finally,
the positive correlation between feelings of connection and VS activity
to close others present in the placebo condition was erased by
naltrexone. Effects remained after adjusting for physical symptoms.
Together, results lend support to theories suggesting that opioids
contribute to social bonding, especially with our closest loved ones.
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