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Self-affirmation activates brain systems associated with self-related processing and reward and is reinforced by future orientation
Authors:Christopher N. Cascio  Matthew Brook O’Donnell  Francis J. Tinney  Matthew D. Lieberman  Shelley E. Taylor  Victor J. Strecher  Emily B. Falk
Affiliation:1.University of Pennsylvania, Annenverg School for Communication, Philadelphia, PA;2.University of Michigan, Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, MI;3.Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract:
Self-affirmation theory posits that people are motivated to maintain a positive self-view and that threats to perceived self-competence are met with resistance. When threatened, self-affirmations can restore self-competence by allowing individuals to reflect on sources of self-worth, such as core values. Many questions exist, however, about the underlying mechanisms associated with self-affirmation. We examined the neural mechanisms of self-affirmation with a task developed for use in a functional magnetic resonance imaging environment. Results of a region of interest analysis demonstrated that participants who were affirmed (compared with unaffirmed participants) showed increased activity in key regions of the brain’s self-processing (medial prefrontal cortex + posterior cingulate cortex) and valuation (ventral striatum + ventral medial prefrontal cortex) systems when reflecting on future-oriented core values (compared with everyday activities). Furthermore, this neural activity went on to predict changes in sedentary behavior consistent with successful affirmation in response to a separate physical activity intervention. These results highlight neural processes associated with successful self-affirmation, and further suggest that key pathways may be amplified in conjunction with prospection.
Keywords:self-affirmation   fMRI   reward   positive valuation   emotion regulation
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