New Scientist - USA (2020-04-18)

(Antfer) #1

12 | New Scientist | 18 April 2020


ROBIN DUNBAR has spent decades
studying relationships, social
bonding and the importance of
touch and grooming in forging
and sustaining our ties to others.
As much of the world remains
in lockdown, unable to meet loved
ones and friends in person, New
Scientist caught up with him to ask
what implications this might have.

Tiffany O’Callaghan: How
important are touch and contact
in person in our relationships?
Robin Dunbar: For all mammals,
including us, grooming
triggers the endorphin system
[which relieves stress and pain].
Brain-imaging studies looking
at people being stroked show
that their endorphin receptors
go absolutely crazy.
With our closer friends and
family, you actually do a lot of
casual stroking and touching
and hugging that we don’t think
about, it’s all going on below the
event horizon of consciousness.
Not only does this make you
feel happy, because it releases
endorphins, which raise your pain
thresholds and make you feel
relaxed and much more trusting,
but it also seems to kick on the
immune system, making you
more resistant to diseases.

Are you worried about people going
without this kind of touch, due to
the pandemic or other issues?
For most people, in the short
term, I would say no. Everything
hinges on how long this lasts.
Clearly, the expectation is that
it’s only going to be a few months
and then we’re going to be back
to normal. You can also trigger
this same endorphin system by
going for a jog, for instance.

Are there social ways to trigger
this response?
To increase the size of our social
groups, we’ve discovered ways
of triggering the endorphin
system that don’t involve touch.
All of the singing from balconies
and in streets. Singing is one of the
social mechanisms we use. There’s
laughter, singing, dancing, eating
socially, drinking socially, all of
those kinds of things are what
we use to enlarge our social circle.
Physical grooming is very
intimate. This is what ultimately
limits the size of primates’ social

groups. They don’t have enough
time in the day to groom more
than a set number of individuals,
and the quality of the relationship
depends on the time invested in it.
So going out to clap for
healthcare workers and the like
probably makes you feel better.

So doing things with others
amplifies feel-good effects?
Yes. We first discovered this
with rowing crews, in a study
we did about 10 years ago. We
showed that just by rowing on
the machines in the gym there’s
an uplift in pain threshold
signalling and endorphin release.
But then if you link the rowing
machines into a virtual boat, so

the rowers are rowing together
and in synchrony, it ramps up
the endorphin output by about
100 per cent for no extra effort.
We’ve shown this with dance
too, and even tears. We did a study
in which we had a group of people
watch a very emotionally draining
film. People who like weepy films

get this rush of endorphins,
and then also feel very bonded
to the group of strangers who
they watched it with.
The sociality ramps up the
effect. That’s why I think a lot of
these social mechanisms we use
for bonding on the larger scale are
highly synchronised: laughter,
singing, dancing, religious rituals.

Can we get the benefits of shared
activities – such as laughing or
singing together – over video chat?
We haven’t looked at that directly,
but we have looked at people’s
sense of satisfaction or happiness
as a result of communicating
with friends via different media.
Skype and face-to-face video are
in a different league to everything
else. Once you can see the person,
it makes a big difference – the fact
that you can see the smile
breaking on their face before
you’ve finished the joke.

Do you think there will be positive
things that come out of this
lockdown, in terms of how we
connect with each other?
We’ve already seen people getting
onto Skype or Zoom [video chats]
with their friends or extended
family and saying, “This is crazy,
why have we never done this
before?” That may well continue.
It completely neutralises the
problem of distance. In social
networks, there’s a very strong
effect called the 30-minute rule
that dictates how long you’re
willing to travel to go to see
somebody. Video and other
digital media reduces its impact.
Many people are now
contacting friends and family
at rates that far exceed what
they’ve done normally.
And I think when lockdown
is removed, people will be
making a big effort to go
and visit friends and family. ❚

Profile
Robin Dunbar studies the evolution
of primate social behaviour
at the University of Oxford, UK

Relationships under lockdown


Interview: Robin Dunbar

PH

YN

AR
T^ S

TU

DIO

/GE

TT

Y^ IM

AG

ES

“ We’ve discovered ways
to trigger endorphins
that don’t involve touch:
singing, dancing, laughter”

Social distancing may limit how much we see loved ones, but that doesn’t
mean our relationships will be damaged, finds Tiffany O’Callaghan

People in countries around the
world are experiencing levels of
social isolation they aren’t used to

News Coronavirus

Free download pdf