The Neurobiological Craving Signature (NCS) predicts social craving and responds to social isolation
Ana Defendini Cortes (CRNL-SOCIALHEALTH), Livia Tomova, Leonie Koban (CRNL-SOCIALHEALTH)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the Neurobiological Craving Signature (NCS), an fMRI-based brain signature, predicts social craving and responds to social isolation, revealing shared brain circuits for social, food, and drug cravings.
Contribution
It extends the NCS to social craving, showing its responsiveness to social deprivation and its potential to study primary rewards and social isolation effects.
Findings
NCS predicts craving for social and food cues but not flowers.
NCS responses increase after fasting for food and social isolation.
Shared brain circuits underlie craving for social, food, and drug stimuli.
Abstract
Humans are inherently social and seek connection with others for survival. Recent studies suggest that acute social isolation leads to craving for social interactions, but the brain mechanisms of social craving and their relationship to brain networks underlying drug and food craving remain incompletely understood. Here we harnessed an existing dataset and tested whether the Neurobiological Craving Signature (NCS)-a recently developed fMRI-based brain-signature of drug and food craving-also predicts social craving. During fMRI, participants rated their craving for images of food, social interactions, and flowers in three different sessions: after 10h of fasting from food, 10h of social isolation, or neither (baseline; order of sessions counterbalanced). The NCS significantly predicted self-reported craving for food and social cues but not flower cues. Further, NCS responses to food were…
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