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  4. Work-related Social Support Modulates Effects of Early Life Stress on Limbic Reactivity during Stress
 
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Work-related Social Support Modulates Effects of Early Life Stress on Limbic Reactivity during Stress

Journal
Brain imaging and behavior
ISSN
1931-7557
ISSN-Digital
1931-7565
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2017-12-15
Author(s)
Leicht-Deobald, Ulrich  
Bruch, Heike  
Bönke, Luisa
Stevense, Amie
Fan, Yan
Bajbouj, Malek
Grimm, Simone
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11682-017-9810-z
Abstract
Early life stress (ELS) affects stress- reactivity via limbic brain regions implicated such as hippocampus and amygdala. Social support is a major protective factor against ELS effects, while subjects with ELS experience reportedly perceive less of it in their daily life. The workplace, where most adults spend a substantial amount of time in their daily lives, might serve as a major resource for social support. Since previous data demonstrated that social support attenuates stress reactivity, we here used a psychosocial stress task to test the hypothesis that work-related social support modulates the effects of ELS. Results show decreased amygdala reactivity during stress in ELS subjects who report high levels of work- related social support, thereby indicating a signature for reduced stress reactivity. However, this effect was only observable on the neural, but not on the behavioral level, since social support had no buffering effect regarding the subjective experience of stress in daily life as well as regarding feelings of uncontrollability induced by the stress task. Accordingly, our data suggest that subjects with ELS experiences might benefit from interventions targeted at lowering their subjective stress levels by helping them to better perceive the availability of social support in their daily lives.
Language
English
Keywords
Work Related Social Support
Early Life Stress
Stress Reactivity
Limbic Reacivity
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
SoM - Business Innovation
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Springer
Publisher place
New York, NY [u.a.]
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/101697
Subject(s)

social sciences

business studies

Division(s)

I.FPM - Institute for...

IWE - Institute for B...

Contact Email Address
ulrich.leicht-deobald@unisg.ch
Eprints ID
252793
File(s)
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open.access

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Manuscript_with_figures.pdf

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808.81 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

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1fbae2ad9539f2fa26c8f1dadf0ec548

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