Anxiety
impairs judgment in social situations, study finds
Brown University
A new study suggests that people are
remarkably adept at avoiding exploitation at the hands of others - unless they
suffer from anxiety.
A group of three researchers from
Brown University recently conducted a study that found that healthy people
easily recognize when those around them become increasingly untrustworthy — and
they react, appropriately enough, by pulling away.
But they found that the same wasn’t
true for those who have significant levels of anxiety.
People who are anxious, the study concluded, continue to trust and invest in people who display increasingly untrustworthy behavior.
People who are anxious, the study concluded, continue to trust and invest in people who display increasingly untrustworthy behavior.
“We know from previous research that learning and uncertainty are very closely linked,” said Amrita Lamba, the study’s first author and a Ph.D. student in Brown’s Department of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences.
“This study demonstrates that, if we
do not have anxiety, we’re actually able to learn more once we detect
uncertainty in social interactions, which helps us to avoid being exploited and
to learn who can be trusted. With every uncertain social situation we navigate,
with every change in trustworthiness we observe in people, we are fine-tuning
our opinions of them and adjusting our relationships with them accordingly.”
For the study, Lamba worked with
Oriel FeldmanHall, an assistant professor of cognitive, linguistic and
psychological sciences at Brown, and Michael Frank, a professor of psychology
at Brown and an expert computational modeler, to recruit 350 clinically diverse
participants — about a quarter of whom showed symptoms of generalized
anxiety disorder — and to design two activities that would measure the
participants’ abilities to learn and adapt in uncertain situations.
First, the researchers asked
participants to gamble on three different online slot machines.
Unbeknownst to the subjects, the machines were rigged: One was designed to return consistently good winnings at the beginning, but it became unprofitable after the first few spins; the second consistently lost participants’ money at first, but then it began to become more profitable; the third was inconsistent and ultimately resulted in a zero-sum, zero-loss game for participants.
The researchers noted that almost all participants, including those with anxiety symptoms, noticed the machines’ patterns and adjusted their behavior accordingly: They invested less money in the first slot machine after observing a decrease in luck, and they invested more in the second machine when they noticed their returns improving.
Next, the researchers guided
participants through a trust game. They told participants they would take part
in a multi-person activity where they could give the other players between 10
cents and $1 per round.
The money they gave away in each
round would immediately quadruple in value. Their fellow players would then be
given the option to return a portion of that money to the participant.
Participants were, in reality,
playing the trust game with algorithms, not people. Some algorithms initially
gave back a large percentage of the quadrupled money but gradually became less
generous; others were initially stingy with the amounts they gave back but
increased their generosity over time.
Researchers noticed that the healthy people’s behaviors shifted even more quickly in the trust game than in the slot machine game — that is, they reacted to changing behaviors in the other “players” by quickly beginning to give more money to those who gradually began to share generously and quickly learning to give less to those who began to share sparingly.
Their fast reflexes suggested to the
researchers that most healthy people have an easier time adapting to uncertain
social situations than to non-social uncertainty.
“For a long time, there has been
debate about whether the way we process and learn from information in the
non-social domain is different than how we learn about people,” Lamba said.
“This research demonstrates that
we’re uniquely adept at what’s called ‘reward learning’ in social situations
— that even though the underlying neural circuitry is largely the same for
social and non-social learning, social learning in particular seems to recruit
a set of mechanisms that makes us very flexible and quick to adapt when we
detect uncertainty or threat in the environment.”
But not all of the participants were
as quick to adjust their behavior. Participants who had reported symptoms of
general anxiety disorder did give more money to their consistently generous
fellow “players” and less money to consistently stingy ones — but when they
encountered “players” who started off generous and became increasingly stingy,
they continued to give away large portions of their money.
In other words, anxious patients seemed to continue to invest in relationships that were no longer paying off for them.
In other words, anxious patients seemed to continue to invest in relationships that were no longer paying off for them.
“People who don’t have anxiety are
good at updating their belief that someone is trustworthy when the data begin
to say, actually, this person isn’t as trustworthy as they were before,”
FeldmanHall said. “But people with anxiety struggle with this. They try to give
people more and more money even though they’re getting signals that these
people are less trustworthy than they originally thought.”
The researchers weren’t surprised by
this result. They knew from previous research that people with symptoms of
anxiety tend to be less tolerant of uncertainty. Even in some non-social
situations, FeldmanHall said, anxious people are less able to adapt to evolving
situations.
Why did the high-anxiety
participants adapt better on the slot machines than in the trust game? Were the
anxious participants aware of the changing trustworthiness of the other
“players” in the trust game — and if so, why did they choose to ignore the
behavioral changes?
Researchers said it wasn’t clear
what exactly was happening in anxious people’s brains as they played the trust
game, and they hope future research will shed light on their thought processes.
“People with anxiety could be unable
to detect changes in the social environment, or they could be making a
conscious decision to invest in a good relationship rather than protect
themselves economically,” Lamba said.
“That’s something we would want to
tease out in follow-up work. There could be a lot of variation in where the
decision-making mechanism diverges — it could be the case that not all anxious
people think alike.”
FeldmanHall said this study is an
important first step in measuring people’s adaptability to the changing
behavior of others. Most previous research has monitored people as they react
to others whose behavior is static — hardly a realistic reflection of our
ever-changing personalities and social dynamics.
“What we have modeled here is much
more akin to the real world of how people behave,” FeldmanHall said. “Our
social worlds are incredibly important to learn about, because they have the
most impact on our daily well-being. We need more studies that model our social
worlds more accurately.”
The research was funded by a Center
of Biomedical Research Excellence grant (P20GM103645) from the National
Institute of General Medical Sciences.