Homeostatic Regulation of Energetic Arousal During Acute Social Isolation: Evidence From the Lab and the Field.

Stijovic, A; Forbes, PAG; Tomova, L; Skoluda, N; Feneberg, AC; Piperno, G; Pronizius, E; Nater, UM; Lamm, C; Silani, G

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that social contact is a basic need governed by a social homeostatic system. Little is known, however, about how conditions of altered social homeostasis affect human psychology and physiology. Here, we investigated the effects of 8 hr of social isolation on psychological and physiological variables and compared this with 8 hr of food deprivation in a lab experiment (N = 30 adult women). Social isolation led to lowered self-reported energetic arousal and heightened fatigue, comparable with food deprivation. To test whether these findings would extend to a real-life setting, we conducted a preregistered field study during a COVID-19 lockdown (N = 87 adults; 47 women). The drop in energetic arousal after social isolation observed in the lab replicated in the field study for participants who lived alone or reported high sociability, suggesting that lowered energy could be part of a homeostatic response to the lack of social contact.

Details about the publication

JournalPsychological Science
Volume34
Issue5
Page range537-551
StatusPublished
Release year2023 (31/05/2023)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1177/09567976231156413
KeywordsArousal; COVID-19; Fatigue; Homeostasis; Social Isolation; Arousal

Authors from the University of Münster

Feneberg, Anja Christine
Professorship of clinical psychology and psychotherapy of children and adolescents (Prof. Hechler)