1. Dorsolateral and ventromedial prefrontal cortex orchestrate normative choice
- Author
-
Christoph Eisenegger, Philine Hotz, Thomas Baumgartner, Ernst Fehr, Daria Knoch, University of Zurich, and Baumgartner, Thomas
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Choice Behavior ,Brain mapping ,Functional Laterality ,Posterior ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,SX00 SystemsX.ch ,10007 Department of Economics ,Neural Pathways ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Social Behavior ,Prefrontal cortex ,030304 developmental biology ,Self-reference effect ,Brain Mapping ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,2800 General Neuroscience ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ,330 Economics ,Oxygen ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Games, Experimental ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Brain stimulation ,Linear Models ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Female ,SX11 Neurochoice ,Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Consumer neuroscience ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Humans are noted for their capacity to over-ride self-interest in favor of normatively valued goals. We examined the neural circuitry that is causally involved in normative, fairness-related decisions by generating a temporarily diminished capacity for costly normative behavior, a 'deviant' case, through non-invasive brain stimulation (repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation) and compared normal subjects' functional magnetic resonance imaging signals with those of the deviant subjects. When fairness and economic self-interest were in conflict, normal subjects (who make costly normative decisions at a much higher frequency) displayed significantly higher activity in, and connectivity between, the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and the posterior ventromedial prefrontal cortex (pVMPFC). In contrast, when there was no conflict between fairness and economic self-interest, both types of subjects displayed identical neural patterns and behaved identically. These findings suggest that a parsimonious prefrontal network, the activation of right DLPFC and pVMPFC, and the connectivity between them, facilitates subjects' willingness to incur the cost of normative decisions.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF