4.7 Review

Social isolation and the brain in the pandemic era

Journal

NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 1333-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41562-022-01453-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Brain Canada Foundation, through the Canada Brain Research Fund
  2. National Institutes of Health [NIH R01 AG068563A, NIH R01 R01DA053301-01A1]
  3. Canadian Institute of Health Research [CIHR 438531, CIHR 470425]
  4. Healthy Brains Healthy Lives initiative (Canada First Research Excellence fund)
  5. Google
  6. CIFAR Artificial Intelligence Chairs programme (Canada Institute for Advanced Research)
  7. Health Canada

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Intense sociality and personal social relationships are crucial for our health and well-being. This article explores the evolutionary background and defining features of human sociality, as well as the consequences and drivers of mass social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic, including mental health deterioration and neural effects.
Intense sociality has been a catalyst for human culture and civilization, and our social relationships at a personal level play a pivotal role in our health and well-being. These relationships are, however, sensitive to the time we invest in them. To understand how and why this should be, we first outline the evolutionary background in primate sociality from which our human social world has emerged. We then review defining features of that human sociality, putting forward a framework within which one can understand the consequences of mass social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic, including mental health deterioration, stress, sleep disturbance and substance misuse. We outline recent research on the neural basis of prolonged social isolation, highlighting especially higher-order neural circuits such as the default mode network. Our survey of studies covers the negative effects of prolonged social deprivation and the multifaceted drivers of day-to-day pandemic experiences.

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