“…Indeed, a scientific consensus suggests that SSS is linked with health—even after statistically netting out traditional measures of socioeconomic status ( Cundiff & Matthews, 2017 ; Demakakos, Nazroo, Breeze, & Marmot, 2008 ; Nobles, Weintraub, & Adler, 2013 ; Präg, Mills, & Wittek, 2016 ; Singh-Manoux, Marmot, & Adler, 2005 ). Perceptions of one’s placement in the broader socioeconomic hierarchy may evoke physiological stress responses by degrading psychological resources such as self-esteem ( Rahal, Chiang, Bower, et al, 2020 ) and invoking inflammatory responses to perceived threat of inferiority ( Kuhlman, Chiang, Horn, & Bower, 2017 ). Relatedly, Eisenberger (2015) argues that painful feelings after social rejection or exclusion—in other words, feelings of inferiority—rely on some of the same neural regions that process physical pain.…”