PERSONALITY: EXTRAVERTS vs. INTROVERTS
by Turhan Canli, Ph.D., Zuo Zhao, Ph.D., John E. Desmond, Ph.D., Eunjoo Kang, Ph.D.,
James Gross, Ph.D., and John D.E. Gabrieli, Ph.D.
The American psychological Association has announced research that shows that our brains
respond to different environmental stimulus as a result of personality type. Depending
whether a person is extraverted or neurotic, his or her brain will amplify
different experiences over others.
In their study, psychologists Turhan Canli, Ph.D., and colleagues of
Stanford University used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to
measure the relation between brain responses to emotional stimuli -
pictures. While in a fMRI scanner, 14 healthy 19-42 year old women's brain
reactions to pictures containing negative images (crying or angry people,
spiders, guns or a cemetery) or positive images (happy couple, puppies,
foods like ice cream or brownies or sunsets) that provoked strong emotional
reactions were determined. A personality measure was also used to help the
researchers determine the participants' level of extraversion - the tendency
to be optimistic and sociable and their level of neuroticism - the tendency
to be anxious, worried and socially insecure.
The fMRI results show that the women who scored high on extraversion also
had greater brain reactivity to positive stimuli compared to negative
stimuli than did those women who scored low on extraversion. The
associations between extraversion and neural activity in response to
positive images were observable in several areas of the brain that control
emotion, including the frontal cortex, amygdala and anterior cingulate.
For the women who scored low on extraversion, no brain reactivity to
positive stimuli was found. But those who scored high on the neuroticism
measures had more brain reactions to negative stimuli, but in fewer parts of
the brain that control emotions.
"Depending on personality traits, people's brains seem to amplify some
aspects of experience over others," said Dr. Gabrieli. "All of the
participants saw very positive and very negative scenes, but people's
reactions were very different. One group saw the cup as being very full
while the other group saw it as very empty."
These results show that individual differences in brain reactivity to
emotional stimuli are associated with specific personality traits, which
also supports earlier MRI studies of extraverted and depressed people,
according to the authors. Extraverts compared to introverts were found to
have elevated frontal blood flow even at rest and depressed patients whose
conditions have been linked to neuroticism were found to have reduced blood
flow in that same region of the brain.
Previous examinations of emotion and brain activation have had inconsistent
results, said lead author Canli. Some studies have shown that the amygdala,
a part of the brain responsible for emotional memory, plays a role in
shaping emotional experience, face recognition and processing visual and
emotional stimuli. Other research contradicts those findings and maybe,
Canli says, because the participants in the studies were more extraverted
than those in other studies. "Those personality differences could lead to
differing amygdala responses across studies."
In future studies, said Dr. Canli, we will assign participants more specific
tasks to perform while viewing emotional stimuli, such as rating the
emotional experience they are having, retrieving emotional memories or
encoding the pictures into memory. "By doing that, we begin to lay out a
road map of how personality plays into our emotional processing in specific
domains of functioning, such as attention, experience, memory and
perception."
Article: "An fMRI Study of Personality
Influences on Brain Reactivity to Emotional Stimuli," Turhan Canli,
Ph.D., Zuo Zhao, Ph.D., John E. Desmond, Ph.D., Eunjoo Kang, Ph.D.,
James Gross, Ph.D., and John D.E. Gabrieli, Ph.D., Behavioral Neuroscience,
Vol. 115, No. 1.
03/11/01
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