Socialites and curmudgeons not only have
different party demeanors, they may also have
different brain structures, a new study
suggests. But what came first - the incentive to
charm or the bolstered brain anatomy - is still
a matter of debate.
Forty-one randomly selected men filled out a
questionnaire assessing their own tendency to,
say, "make a warm personal connection." Those
who reported being sociable and emotionally
demonstrative also tended to have denser cell
concentration in two brain structures: the
orbitofrontal cortex and the
ventral striatum, said the study's head
researcher
Graham Murray of the
University of Cambridge in the United
Kingdom.
The research was published in the May 20 issue
of the
European Journal of
Neuroscience.
Chicken or egg
Many studies have found correlations between the
size of a particular brain structure and
physical behavior, such as the classic finding
that taxi drivers often have more developed
hippocampi, structures associated with
spatial memory. Whether the above-average
geographic abilities existed before or only
developed after the subjects became cabbies is
unclear. The burgeoning field of social
neuroscience is producing similar findings.
For example, the structural research by Murray
and colleagues is backed by a recent study
published in
Nature Neuroscience and led by
Michael Cohen. He showed that strong
neuronal connections between the orbitofrontal
cortex and striatum were also associated with
social pleasure.
"Connectivity encourages growth of brain
regions," Murray said, so taken together the
studies suggest two
causal relationships. A particular brain
composition could create a warm personality, but
experiencing
social behavior could also create a
social brain, he said.
Most likely it is both nature and nurture acting
in tandem, creating "a snowball effect," Murray
theorized. Experience spurs brain growth, brain
growth influences behavior, behavior affects
experience and around we go.
Personality develops most rapidly during
childhood and adolescence, Murray said, but
traits are never completely fixed. Even
in adulthood, he continued, "social experiences
could have their effect by changing brain
structures over time."
Key to Survival
The identified brain areas also respond to
pleasures, such as food and sex, that are
necessary for species survival. Over the course
of evolution, socializing may have also become a
critical need, Murray said.
"Humans and our ancestors became the smart
animals that we are because we had to deal with
one another," agreed David Bjorklund of
Florida Atlantic University, who was not
involved in the current study. Social traits
likely developed in response to certain
environmental pressures, such as lack of food or
extended juvenile periods, requiring humans to
learn to cooperate, he said.
While other animals take pleasure in
socializing, humans enjoy it in a definitively
intricate way. We may have taken what was a
simple survival mechanism and developed it into
a complex pleasure, Murray said. Even today, "social
interaction is vital for us," he said.

