Loneliness to Meaningless : Event-Related Potentials Reveal Loneliness Modulates Neural Responses of Semantic Processing in Healthy Older Adults
Research output: Conference Papers › Poster › peer-review
Author(s)
Related Research Unit(s)
Detail(s)
Original language | English |
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Pages | S49 |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2023 |
Conference
Title | 63rd Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research (SPR 2023) |
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Place | United States |
City | New Orleans |
Period | 27 September - 1 October 2023 |
Link(s)
Permanent Link | https://scholars.cityu.edu.hk/en/publications/publication(ad49947c-3d6f-45e5-b889-d97a1d81bd66).html |
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Abstract
Loneliness (LS) is an aversive emotional response to the subjective-evaluated inadequacy in individuals’ social relationships and interactions, with its prevalence only to be exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic. Previous studies have associated loneliness in late adulthood with clinical affective disorders and cognitive functional declines. Yet few studies focused on the impact of loneliness on language comprehension, despite the obvious social nature of language abilities and its importance in maintaining one’s social network. We aim to fill this gap and investigate whether and how loneliness affects semantic retrieval in healthy older adults. Event-related potentials were recorded while participants were making category membership decisions on three types of targets: high typicality (HT), low typicality (LT), and
violation (VIO). The N400 effect between LT and VIO was negatively correlated with LS. The high loneliness group showed marginal HT-VIO differences on N400 with delayed onsets, in more restricted time windows from the successive 50ms analysis compared to the low loneliness group. These results suggest loneliness erodes and alters individuals’ semantic processing among healthy older adults. Loneliness modulates the efficacy of using category contexts in activating semantic associations. Overall, loneliness may further hinder language comprehension, which undermines one’s ability to communicate and reconnect with others, and then in return, feed into loneliness reciprocally.
violation (VIO). The N400 effect between LT and VIO was negatively correlated with LS. The high loneliness group showed marginal HT-VIO differences on N400 with delayed onsets, in more restricted time windows from the successive 50ms analysis compared to the low loneliness group. These results suggest loneliness erodes and alters individuals’ semantic processing among healthy older adults. Loneliness modulates the efficacy of using category contexts in activating semantic associations. Overall, loneliness may further hinder language comprehension, which undermines one’s ability to communicate and reconnect with others, and then in return, feed into loneliness reciprocally.
Citation Format(s)
Loneliness to Meaningless: Event-Related Potentials Reveal Loneliness Modulates Neural Responses of Semantic Processing in Healthy Older Adults. / Li, Bing; Huang, Chih-Mao; Lin, Qiduo et al.
2023. S49 Poster session presented at 63rd Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research (SPR 2023), New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
2023. S49 Poster session presented at 63rd Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research (SPR 2023), New Orleans, Louisiana, United States.
Research output: Conference Papers › Poster › peer-review