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To you I am listening: Perceived competence of advisors influences judgment and decision-making via recruitment of the amygdala
- Source :
- Soc Neurosci
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Considering advice from others is a pervasive element of human social life. We used the judge-advisor paradigm to investigate the neural correlates of advice evaluation and advice integration by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging. Our results demonstrate that evaluating advice recruits the "mentalizing network," brain regions activated when people think about others' mental states. Important activation differences exist, however, depending upon the perceived competence of the advisor. Consistently, additional analyses demonstrate that integrating others' advice, i.e., how much participants actually adjust their initial estimate, correlates with neural activity in the centromedial amygdala in the case of a competent and with activity in visual cortex in the case of an incompetent advisor. Taken together, our findings, therefore, demonstrate that advice evaluation and integration rely on dissociable neural mechanisms and that significant differences exist depending upon the advisor's reputation, which suggests different modes of processing advice depending upon the perceived competence of the advisor.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Social Psychology
media_common.quotation_subject
education
Decision Making
Development
Brain mapping
Amygdala
Article
Behavioral Neuroscience
Judgment
Young Adult
medicine
Humans
Active listening
Competence (human resources)
media_common
Neural correlates of consciousness
Brain Mapping
medicine.diagnostic_test
Middle Aged
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
medicine.anatomical_structure
Mentalization
Female
Functional magnetic resonance imaging
Psychology
Social psychology
Reputation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Soc Neurosci
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....fd6dcc5de5f0b88830b47e9af699710b