Showing posts with label stress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stress. Show all posts

2012-04-10

Social Status Affects Immune System

BBC News - Social rank 'linked to immunity'



A study of rhesus macaque monkeys may have solved a long-standing puzzle on a link between social rank and health.
A study of 10 social groups of macaque females showed that the activity level of an individual's immune genes was an accurate predictor of her social rank.

In a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team also showed that the monkey's immunity changed when social rank was altered.

The work suggests that status drives immune health, rather than vice-versa.


Changes in Monkeys' Social Status Affect Their Genes | Duke Today

The study is the first to use an experimental approach to observe how gene expression patterns across a range of genes correlate with an animal's social dominance. It estimates that gene expression can predict the social status of an individual with 80 percent accuracy.

"Our study supports the idea that low social status can be bad for the body. But it hints at the idea that if you improve your social situation, your health improves, too," said the study's lead author Jenny Tung, a visiting assistant professor in Duke University's evolutionary anthropology department.

[...]

Tung said scientists have more work to do to understand how improving social status affects the way genes turn on and off. But she found it "exciting" and "comforting" that her team observed positive changes in the expression of immune-system genes of several monkeys whose social rank increased, she said.

The Tung lab

Genes influence behavior; behavior influences genes.

The interplay between these effects is the focus of research in the Tung lab. Specifically, we are interested in how genetic differences and gene regulatory effects shape behavioral traits, and in the reciprocal influence of social and behavioral variation on genetic variation and genome function. To pursue these questions, we focus primarily on highly social populations of nonhuman primates, systems that are natural models for human health, sociality, and evolution.
Source: home

Research

Rhesus macaques in captivity present the opportunity to study social environmental effects on genetics and gene regulation in a controlled setting. We take advantage of the ability to manipulate social status and social group composition to isolate the influence of these variables and to study the regulatory mechanisms that mediate these effects.
Source: research


2008-06-25

Men And Women Respond Differently To Stress

The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine is reporting research that shows that different parts of the brain are activated in males and females when confronted with a stressful situation. The researchers examined the activity of participant's brains using fMRI while exposed to stress.
clipped from whyfiles.org
A picture of stress
You may not know it, but your levels of stress hormones are probably rising. Ditto for your heart rate. In animals, stress can stunt growth, slow learning, or fluster the immune system. In people, chronic stress can cause high blood pressure, among other problems.
Test subjects were asked about their state of stress and anxiety between MRI scans. While stress and anxiety showed similar trends, stress was even higher after the hard math task.
Right front of brain is highlighted
Anxiety and especially stress rose most right after the math test, then subsided
brain illustration with pull quote
Graph shows that the higher the perceived stress, the higher the blood flow in right prefrontal cortex.

Stress Response is Gender Specific

ScienceDaily: Your source for the latest research news  and science breakthroughs -- updated daily

Men Are From Mars
Neuroscientists Find That Men And Women Respond Differently To Stress

April 1, 2008 — Functional magnetic resonance imaging of men and women under stress showed neuroscientists how their brains differed in response to stressful situations. In men, increased blood flow to the left orbitofrontal cortex suggested activation of the "fight or flight" response. In women, stress activated the limbic system, which is associated with emotional responses.


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Related:

Stress Response is Gender Specific
Center for Functional Neuroimaging, University of Pennsylvania
The Why Files | Stress on the brain
Men Are From Mars -- Neuroscientists Find That Men And Women Respond Differently To Stress
Brain Imaging Shows How Men And Women Cope Differently Under Stress
Dr. J. Wang

2008-05-23

Fake Smile Health Risks

clipped from www.spiegel.de
SPIEGEL ONLINE

Don't Smile Too Much, German Shop Assistants Warned

A German psychologist has warned "professional smilers" such as flight attendants and shop assistants that too much forced smiling can cause stress, depression and even heart problems. It's unlikely to become a major health issue though -- German customer service isn't renowned for its friendliness.

Too much professional smiling carries health risks, a German psychologist has warned.
The stress caused by having to flash one's teeth at customers can lead to depression, high blood pressure and cardiovascular problems, Professor Dieter Zapf of the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University of Frankfurt told Apotheken Umschau, a healthcare magazine handed out free at pharmacies in Germany. Zapf's findings are based on research conducted by the university.
clipped from www.youtube.com
How To Spot A Fake Smile
clipped from www.bbc.co.uk
BBC
A girl smiling
Smiles
Can you spot when someone is faking a smile? Try our test and find out.
Smiles Test | Open2 Evolution of Emotion
clipped from amenclinics.com

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