Neural synchronization predicts marital satisfaction

Marital attachment plays an important role in maintaining intimate personal relationships and sustaining psychological well-being. Mate-selection theories suggest that people are more likely to marry someone with a similar personality and social status, yet evidence for the association between perso...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 119; no. 34; pp. 1 - 12
Main Authors Li, Lei, Huang, Xinyue, Xiao, Jinming, Zheng, Qingyu, Shan, Xiaolong, He, Changchun, Liao, Wei, Chen, Huafu, Menon, Vinod, Duan, Xujun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 23.08.2022
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Summary:Marital attachment plays an important role in maintaining intimate personal relationships and sustaining psychological well-being. Mate-selection theories suggest that people are more likely to marry someone with a similar personality and social status, yet evidence for the association between personality-based couple similarity measures and marital satisfaction has been inconsistent. A more direct and useful approach for understanding fundamental processes underlying marital satisfaction is to probe similarity of dynamic brain responses to maritally and socially relevant communicative cues, which may better reflect how married couples process information in real time and make sense of their mates and themselves. Here, we investigate shared neural representations based on intersubject synchronization (ISS) of brain responses during free viewing of marital life-related, and nonmarital, object-related movies. Compared to randomly selected pairs of couples, married couples showed significantly higher levels of ISS during viewing of marital movies and ISS between married couples predicted higher levels of marital satisfaction. ISS in the default mode network emerged as a strong predictor of marital satisfaction and canonical correlation analysis revealed a specific relation between ISS in this network and shared communication and egalitarian components of martial satisfaction. Our findings demonstrate that brain similarities that reflect real-time mental responses to subjective perceptions, thoughts, and feelings about interpersonal and social interactions are strong predictors of marital satisfaction, reflecting shared values and beliefs. Our study advances foundational knowledge of the neurobiological basis of human pair bonding.
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Author contributions: L.L., H.C., V.M., and X.D. designed research; L.L. and X.H. performed research; L.L., X.H., J.X., Q.Z., X.S., C.H., W.L., V.M., and X.D. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; L.L. analyzed data; L.L., V.M., and X.D. wrote the paper; and H.C. and X.D. lead the project.
Edited by Meghan Meyer, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; received February 14, 2022; accepted July 19, 2022 by Editorial Board Member Michael S. Gazzaniga
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2202515119