Natalie Angier
A friend will help you
move, goes an old saying, while a good friend will help you move a body.
And why not? Moral qualms aside, that good friend would likely agree
the victim was an intolerable jerk who had it coming and, jeez, you
shouldn’t have done this but where do you keep the shovel?
Researchers have long known that people choose friends who are much like themselves in a wide array of characteristics:
of a similar age, race, religion, socioeconomic status, educational
level, political leaning, pulchritude rating, even handgrip strength.
The impulse toward homophily, toward bonding with others who are the
least other possible, is found among traditional hunter-gatherer groups and advanced capitalist societies alike.
New
research suggests the roots of friendship extend even deeper than
previously suspected. Scientists have found that the brains of close
friends respond in remarkably similar ways as they view a series of
short videos: the same ebbs and swells of attention and distraction, the
same peaking of reward processing here, boredom alerts there.
The
neural response patterns evoked by the videos — on subjects as diverse
as the dangers of college football, the behavior of water in outer
space, and Liam Neeson trying his hand at improv comedy — proved so
congruent among friends, compared to patterns seen among people who were
not friends, that the researchers could predict the strength of two people’s social bond based on their brain scans alone.
“I
was struck by the exceptional magnitude of similarity among friends,”
said Carolyn Parkinson, a cognitive scientist at the University of
California, Los Angeles. The results “were more persuasive than I would
have thought.” Dr. Parkinson and her colleagues, Thalia Wheatley and
Adam M. Kleinbaum of Dartmouth College, reported their results in Nature
Communications.
“I
think it’s an incredibly ingenious paper,” said Nicholas Christakis,
author of “Connected: The Power of Our Social Networks and How They
Shape Our World” and a biosociologist at Yale University. “It suggests
that friends resemble each other not just superficially, but in the very
structures of their brains.”
The
findings offer tantalizing evidence for the vague sense we have that
friendship is more than shared interests or checking off the right boxes
on a Facebook profile. It’s about something we call good chemistry.
“Our
results suggest that friends might be similar in how they pay attention
to and process the world around them,” Dr. Parkinson said. “That shared
processing could make people click more easily and have the sort of
seamless social interaction that can feel so rewarding.”
Kevin
N. Ochsner, a cognitive neuroscientist at Columbia University who
studies social networks, said the new report is “cool,” “provocative”
and “raises more questions than it answers.” It could well be picking up
traces of “an ineffable shared reality” between friends.
Dr.
Ochsner offered his own story as evidence of the primacy of chemistry
over mere biography. “My wife-to-be and I were both neuroscientists in
the field, we were on dating websites, but we were never matched up,” he
said.
“Then we happened to meet as colleagues and in two minutes we knew we had the kind of chemistry that breeds a relationship.”
Dr.
Parkinson — who is 31, wears large horn-rimmed glasses and has the
wholesome look of a young Sally Field — described herself as introverted
but said, “I’ve been fortunate with my friends.”
The
new study is part of a surge of scientific interest in the nature,
structure and evolution of friendship. Behind the enthusiasm is a
virtual Kilimanjaro of demographic evidence that friendlessness can be
poisonous, exacting a physical and emotional toll
comparable to that of more familiar risk factors like obesity, high
blood pressure, unemployment, lack of exercise, smoking cigarettes.
Scientists
want to know what, exactly, makes friendship so healthy and social
isolation so harmful, and they’re gathering provocative, if not yet
definitive, clues.
Dr. Christakis and his co-workers recently demonstrated that people with strong social ties had comparatively low concentrations of fibrinogen,
a protein associated with the kind of chronic inflammation thought to
be the source of many diseases. Why sociability might help block
inflammation remains unclear.
Researchers
have also been intrigued by evidence of friendship among nonhuman
animals, and not just in obvious candidates like primates, dolphins and
elephants.
Gerald G.
Carter of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama and his
colleagues reported last year that female vampire bats cultivate close relationships with unrelated females
and will share blood meals with those friends in harsh times — a
lifesaving act for animals that can’t survive much more than a day
without food.
Through
years of tracking the behaviors of a large flock of great tits, Josh A.
Firth of Oxford University and his co-workers found that individual
birds showed clear preferences for some flock members over others. When a
bird’s good friend died or disappeared, the bereft tit began making overtures to other birds to replace the lost comrade.
Yet
when it comes to the depth and complexity of bonds, humans have no
peers. Dr. Parkinson and her co-workers previously had shown that people
are keenly and automatically aware of how all the players in their
social sphere fit together, and the scientists wanted to know why some
players in a given network are close friends and others mere nodding
acquaintances.
Inspired by the
research of Uri Hasson of Princeton, they decided to explore subjects’
neural reactions to everyday, naturalistic stimuli — which these days
means watching videos.
The
researchers started with a defined social network: an entire class of
279 graduate students at an unnamed university widely known among
neuroscientists to have been the Dartmouth School of Business.
The
students, who all knew one another and in many cases lived in dorms
together, were asked to fill out questionnaires. Which of their fellow
students did they socialize with — share meals and go to a movie with,
invite into their homes? From that survey the researchers mapped out a
social network of varying degrees of connectivity: friends, friends of
friends, third-degree friends, friends of Kevin Bacon.
The
students were then asked to participate in a brain scanning study and
42 agreed. As an fMRI device tracked blood flow in their brains, the
students watched a series of video clips of varying lengths, an
experience that Dr. Parkinson likened to channel surfing with somebody
else in control of the remote.
They
watched astronaut Chris Hadfield demonstrate how water behaves like a
goopy gel in low gravity. They watched a sedately sentimental scene from
a Jewish wedding between two people who happened to be gay men.
They
watched the author Eric Schlosser warn of the dangers of allowing a few
fast-food giants to control our food supply. They watched what my good
friend Judy Gradwohl and I agreed, on reviewing the clips together
later, was one of the worst music videos ever produced, about a man with
an obviously fake facial deformity who is bullied at work and snubbed
by his attractive female colleague but who eventually wins her heart
when the bullies turn on her and he, Phony Elephant Man, steps in and
beats them up.
The
students watched pratfall comedy clips and an Australian mockumentary so
subtle that certain viewers confessed they didn’t realize it was a
spoof but liked it nonetheless.
Analyzing
the scans of the students, Dr. Parkinson and her colleagues found
strong concordance between blood flow patterns — a measure of neural
activity — and the degree of friendship among the various participants,
even after controlling for other factors that might explain similarities
in neural responses, like ethnicity, religion or family income.
The
researchers identified particularly revealing regions of pattern
concordance among friends, notably in the nucleus accumbens, in the
lower forebrain, which is key to reward processing, and in the superior
parietal lobule, located toward the top and the back of the brain —
roughly at the position of a man bun — where the brain decides how to
allocate attention to the external environment.
Using
the results, the researchers were able to train a computer algorithm to
predict, at a rate well above chance, the social distance between two
people based on the relative similarity of their neural response
patterns.
Dr.
Parkinson emphasized that the study was a “first pass, a proof of
concept,” and that she and her colleagues still don’t know what the
neural response patterns mean: what attitudes, opinions, impulses or
mental thumb-twiddling the scans may be detecting.
They
plan next to try the experiment in reverse: to scan incoming students
who don’t yet know one another and see whether those with the most
congruent neural patterns end up becoming good friends.
Alexander
Nehamas, a professor of philosophy at Princeton University and author
of a meditative book, “On Friendship,” appreciated the design of the
study and its use of video clips to ferret out the signature of
friendship.
“The
aesthetic choices we make, the things we like, the taste we have in
art, plays, TV, furniture — when you put them together they are
absolutely essential components of our character, an indication of who
we are,” he said. We live “immersed in art.”
Not
high art, not a night-at-the-opera art, but everyday art — buildings,
billboards, clothing, the dishes at a restaurant, the percussive rhythms
of subways on train tracks.
“Watching
TV clips is much more accurate to our everyday life than the times we
go to a museum,” he said, and therefore potentially more revealing of
who we are and what we hope to find in a friend.
So if you happened to
catch “The Cute Show: Sloths!,” about a self-proclaimed “sloth
sanctuary” in Costa Rica, and if your first thought wasn’t ooh, how
adorable those little smiley sloths are, but rather, sloths are not pets
to be cuddled and don’t bathe the algae off their fur — haven’t you
heard of mutualism? — give me a call.
We’ll be biosnob soul mates for life.
2 comentarii:
Interesting article but the illustration, while beautiful, is a little short-sighted. It shows two women holding hands. I'm an American female and my best friend is a French man, 10 years older than me who speaks very little English. We live on opposite sides of the globe, are married to other people and yet, we share a complicity and incredible bond of friendship. It's an intellectual, social bond, one that is completely platonic. He and I talk every week, about absolutely everything. Our friendship has also permitted me to remain fluent in French, after all these years.
Luckily, our spouses understand it. We met 39 years ago, when I was hitchhiking in the rain with a friend in the Loire Valley. His girlfriend at the time picked us up and then introduced us to him. He drove us back to Paris a few days later. In other words, the chances of our paths ever crossing were one in a million. Serendipity.
My best friend in life was the only person I've known to share my pan- romantic feelings about the world. There was never any sexual attraction but we had a consistent draw to one another and shared delight in the other's company because we shared heart primacy, life's musical score, IQ, variation of pace, curiosity and other appetites, humor, joys, sorrows, etc etc. In short, as the study suggests, we responded to all the world in very similar (and thus fully understandable) ways. As a psychotherapist, I know that being witnessed is a powerful affirmation of life. We witnessed ourselves in one another and one another in ourselves. Our energy bodies vibrated, flowed, and whirled in congruency. This brain wave study rings true to me and helps explain why we felt blessed as soulmates.
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