Chapter Five - The impact of threats to belonging on health, peripheral physiology, and social behavior. Jaremka, L. M., Nadzan, M. A., & Sunami, N. In volume 67, of Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, pages 277-338. Academic Press, 2023.
Chapter Five - The impact of threats to belonging on health, peripheral physiology, and social behavior [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Human beings have a fundamental need to belong, a need for close and caring relationships. Experiences that threaten belonging should thus lead to an array of negative health consequences and also coordinated behavioral attempts to re-establish belonging. In this chapter, we discuss our work demonstrating that people experiencing threats to belonging are at risk for pain, depression, fatigue, cognitive problems, and acute illness symptoms. We also demonstrate that immune, appetite, and HPA-axis dysregulation may be 3 peripheral physiological mechanisms linking threats to belonging and health. Finally, we examine the impacts that belonging threats have on antisocial and prosocial behavior and review the bi-dimensional rejection taxonomy we developed to better understand these social responses.
@incollection{JAREMKA2023277,
title = {Chapter Five - The impact of threats to belonging on health, peripheral physiology, and social behavior},
editor = {Bertram Gawronski},
series = {Advances in Experimental Social Psychology},
publisher = {Academic Press},
volume = {67},
pages = {277-338},
year = {2023},
issn = {0065-2601},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.aesp.2022.11.005},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0065260122000302},
author = {Lisa M. Jaremka and Megan A. Nadzan and Naoyuki Sunami},
keywords = {Belonging, Rejection, Immune system, Appetite, Food, HPA-axis, Cortisol, Health, Antisocial behavior, Prosocial behavior},
abstract = {Human beings have a fundamental need to belong, a need for close and caring relationships. Experiences that threaten belonging should thus lead to an array of negative health consequences and also coordinated behavioral attempts to re-establish belonging. In this chapter, we discuss our work demonstrating that people experiencing threats to belonging are at risk for pain, depression, fatigue, cognitive problems, and acute illness symptoms. We also demonstrate that immune, appetite, and HPA-axis dysregulation may be 3 peripheral physiological mechanisms linking threats to belonging and health. Finally, we examine the impacts that belonging threats have on antisocial and prosocial behavior and review the bi-dimensional rejection taxonomy we developed to better understand these social responses.}
}

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