popular teen movies like carrie and mean girls have all centred around the theme of revenge. and while watching someone on screen get ‘what they deserved’ can be satisfying, science is now shedding light on the brain processes that lead to revenge in times of conflict. it’s actually pretty fetch.
a new study in the journal elife provides new insights into how the neural processes in our brains drive a desire for revenge in conflicts between groups. the findings suggest that the ‘love drug’ oxytocin increases during times of conflict between groups and influences the part of our brain associated with decision-making activity (known as the medial prefrontal cortex). this, in turn, leads to a greater feeling of love and empathy for those in the group and a need to seek revenge when attacked by outsiders. the researchers say the findings may help explain how a process called “conflict contagion” occurs — which describes what happens when a conflict between a few people spreads across entire groups.
“the desire to seek revenge for an attack during conflict is universal among humans, but the neurobiological processes that drive it are still unclear,” lead author xiaochun han, doctor of psychology and neuroscience at the school of psychological and cognitive sciences, pku-idg/mcgovern institute for brain research, said in a press release to eurkalert .
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“the results highlight an important neurobiological process underpinning the desire for revenge, which may be implicated in conflict contagion during conflict among groups.” said senior author shihui han, professor at the department of psychology and principle investigator at pku-idg/mcgovern institute for brain research, peking university in a press release for eurkalert .