Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Cognitive Science

New study sheds light on neural representations of romantic love and the impact of conflict mediation

by Eric W. Dolan
April 7, 2021
in Cognitive Science, Relationships and Sexual Health
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Follow PsyPost on Google News

New research provides evidence that third-party mediation improves the outcome of difficult discussions between romantic partners. The study, published in the journal Cortex, also suggests that interpersonal conflict can alter how the brain responds to the perception of one’s partner

“What I liked about working on this topic specifically is how easily it lent itself to interdisciplinary research,” said Halima Rafi, a PhD candidate at University of Geneva and the corresponding author of the study.

“Conflict research is a combination of social and affective neuroscience, psychology and economics (we had a parallel experiment on how conflict affects financial decision making that has not been published yet) and we also worked in conjunction with lawyers and mediators from the greater Geneva area. All of this felt promising and important because it brought us closer to studying this very common and significant human experience in an ecologically valid manner.”

For their study, the researchers recruited 36 heterosexual couples from the general community. Prior to the experiment, the participants completed measures of the quality of their relationship, intrapersonal and interpersonal emotional competence, and other factors. The initial survey also included ratings of the level of disagreement on 15 recurring topics of conversation, such as finances and household chores.

The couples were asked to start a discussion about one of these areas of disagreement. The session was accompanied by a professional mediator, who helped to direct the conversation for half of the couples. For the other half, the mediator was present but did not become involved in the conversation.

The researchers found that active mediation was associated with improved satisfaction about the conflict discussion and whether or not an agreement was reached by the end of the session.

“Conflict is a normal and impactful experience that we all have to live through and there are ways of going about it that are less destructive/more constructive than others,” Rafi told PsyPost “One of these ways is using a third-party mediator, which won’t necessarily take away the negative emotions associated with interpersonal conflict but it may increase post-conflict feelings of satisfaction and contentment. These positive emotions are incredibly important for the long-term health of our relationships.”

Before and after the conflict discussion, the researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging to record the participants’ brain activity as they viewed images of their romantic partner’s face or images of an unknown person.

The neuroimaging data provided evidence that the conflict discussion altered the neural representation of romantic partners.

“The activations before the conflict replicated earlier studies on romantic love, showing an activation pattern in brain regions such as the striatum and orbitofrontal cortex,” Rafi explained in a news release. “After the dispute, we quite logically observed a general deactivation in both groups in the regions associated with romantic love, including the striatum.”

When comparing couples who received active mediation with those who did not, the researchers found that the former tended to have greater activation in the nucleus accumbens after the conflict, which is a key region in the brain’s reward circuit. However, this trend did not reach statistical significance, “possibly due to our sample size,” the researchers noted.

“This is a preliminary study which means that it needs to be replicated with larger sample sizes before any major conclusions can be drawn,” Rafi told PsyPost. “An important point for future studies using a pre-post design like ours is to include a third experimental group (in addition to the mediation and no mediation groups) that doesn’t undergo a conflictual discussion in between scans. This is important because it would allow us to say the changes in neural activation after conflict, mediated or not, are in fact related to said conflict and not an effect of time.”

The study, “Impact of couple conflict and mediation on how romantic partners are seen: An fMRI study“, was authored by Halima Rafi, Francois Bogacz, David Sander, and Olga Klimecki.

TweetSendScanShareSendPin3ShareShareShareShareShare

RELATED

Liberals and conservatives live differently — but people think the divide is even bigger than it is
Depression

Low sexual activity, body shape, and mood may combine in ways that shorten lives, new study suggests

July 12, 2025

A large American survey finds that adults who have sex fewer than a dozen times a year die sooner when extra abdominal fat coincides with depression, hinting that mood and body shape can combine in a dangerous feedback loop.

Read moreDetails
Scientists find genetic basis for how much people enjoy music
Cognitive Science

Is humor inherited? Twin study suggests the ability to be funny may not run in the family

July 10, 2025

A first-of-its-kind study set out to discover whether being funny is something you inherit. By testing twins on their joke-making skills, researchers found that your sense of humor might have less to do with DNA than you'd think.

Read moreDetails
Ketamine repairs reward circuitry to reverse stress-induced anhedonia
Relationships and Sexual Health

New study links why people use pornography to day-to-day couple behavior

July 9, 2025

Daily motivations for pornography use predict how couples treat each other, according to a new study. When people used porn to manage emotions, they were less kind. Shared or pleasure-based use, by contrast, was tied to warmer behavior.

Read moreDetails
Even in healthy adults, high blood sugar levels are linked to impaired brain function
Memory

Neuroscientists decode how people juggle multiple items in working memory

July 8, 2025

New neuroscience research shows how the brain decides which memories deserve more attention. By tracking brain activity, scientists found that the frontal cortex helps direct limited memory resources, allowing people to remember high-priority information more precisely than less relevant details.

Read moreDetails
New study uncovers a surprising effect of cold-water immersion
Cognitive Science

New study uncovers a surprising effect of cold-water immersion

July 8, 2025

Cold-water immersion increases energy expenditure—but it may also drive people to eat more afterward. A study in Physiology & Behavior found participants consumed significantly more food following cold exposure, possibly due to internal cooling effects that continue after leaving the water.

Read moreDetails
Being adopted doesn’t change how teens handle love and dating
Relationships and Sexual Health

Being adopted doesn’t change how teens handle love and dating

July 7, 2025

In one of the first large-scale studies on adopted adolescents’ romantic experiences, researchers found that adoption status had little effect on whether teens were dating, how long relationships lasted, or how relationship quality shaped well-being.

Read moreDetails
Positive attitudes toward AI linked to problematic social media use
Cognitive Science

People with higher cognitive ability have weaker moral foundations, new study finds

July 7, 2025

A large study has found that individuals with greater cognitive ability are less likely to endorse moral values such as compassion, fairness, loyalty, and purity. The results point to a consistent negative relationship between intelligence and moral intuitions.

Read moreDetails
Stress disrupts gut and brain barriers by reducing key microbial metabolites, study finds
Infidelity

Othello syndrome: Woman’s rare stroke leads to psychotic delusions of infidelity

July 5, 2025

After suffering a rare type of stroke, a woman with no psychiatric history became convinced her husband was cheating. This case reveals how brain damage can trigger Othello syndrome, a form of delusional jealousy with potentially violent consequences.

Read moreDetails

SUBSCRIBE

Go Ad-Free! Click here to subscribe to PsyPost and support independent science journalism!

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Methylphenidate: ADHD drug curbs impulsivity in men only, linked to brain wiring differences

Daughters who feel more attractive report stronger, more protective bonds with their fathers

Brain scans reveal who may benefit most from MDMA for trauma-related symptoms

Frequent egg consumption linked to lower risk of Alzheimer’s dementia, study finds

Psychopathic personality and weak impulse control pair up to predict teen property crime

Low sexual activity, body shape, and mood may combine in ways that shorten lives, new study suggests

Highly irritable teens are more likely to bully others, but anxiety mitigates this tendency

Neuroscientists identify brain pathway that prioritizes safety over other needs

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy