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Neuroscientist Reveals Brain Maps Relationships in Three Dimensions of Space, Time, and Closeness

Huberman Lab · Essentials: The Science & Process of Healing from Grief · May 28, 2026
Neuroscientist Reveals Brain Maps Relationships in Three Dimensions of Space, Time, and Closeness
Huberman Lab
Huberman Lab
Essentials: The Science & Process of Healing from Grief
"We essentially map our experience of people in 3 dimensions. They relate to space, where people are, time, when people are. And a dimension called closeness and how those 3 dimensions of space, time, and closeness are what establish very close bonds with people."
Andrew Huberman detailed neuroimaging research showing that a single brain region, the inferior parietal lobule, is activated when processing physical proximity, temporal spacing, and emotional closeness. This finding suggests all human attachments are neurologically encoded through these three interwoven dimensions, fundamentally changing how we understand bonding.

About this episode

In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, Stanford neuroscientist Andrew Huberman explored the neuroscience and psychology of grief, presenting a neurobiological framework for understanding how the brain processes loss. Huberman challenged the conventional five-stage grief model popularized by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, instead presenting recent fMRI research showing that attachments are neurologically encoded through three interwoven dimensions: physical space, time, and emotional closeness, all mapped in a single brain region called the inferior parietal lobule. The core insight is that grief is fundamentally a remapping process—the brain must uncouple emotional attachment from spatial and temporal predictions about a lost person while preserving the attachment itself. Huberman detailed research from prairie vole studies and human neuroimaging showing that oxytocin receptor density in the nucleus accumbens predicts grief intensity, explaining individual variance in yearning independent of attachment depth. He also presented cortisol rhythm disruption as a biomarker for complicated grief disorder, with patients showing abnormally elevated late-day cortisol. The episode offered practical tools including dedicated periods of rational grieving to maintain attachment while releasing episodic expectations, morning sunlight exposure to regulate cortisol rhythms, breathwork to increase vagal tone, and non-sleep deep rest protocols to accelerate neuroplasticity during the remapping process. Huberman emphasized that adaptive grief requires holding two truths simultaneously: maintaining intense emotional connection while accepting that spatial and temporal predictions about the lost person no longer apply.

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