Saturday, July 7, 2012

Scientists Find Brain Center for Decisions During Social Interactions

One small region of the brain carries information only for decisions during social interactions, a new study has revealed. Specifically, the area is active when we encounter a worthy opponent and decide whether to deceive them. A brain imaging study conducted by researchers at the Duke Center for Interdisciplinary Decision Science (D-CIDES) put human subjects through a functional MRI brain scan while playing a simplified game of poker against a computer and human opponents.

 Using computer algorithms to sort out what amount of information each area of the brain was processing, the team found only one brain region-the temporal-parietal junction, or TPJ --- carried information that was unique to decisions against the human opponent.

 Some of the time, the subjects were dealt an obviously weak hand. The brain signals in the TPJ told the researchers whether the subject would soon bluff against a human opponent, especially if that opponent was judged to be skilled. But against a computer, signals in the TPJ did not predict the subject's decisions. The TPJ is in a boundary area of the brain, and may be an intersection for two streams of information, said lead researcher McKell Carter, a postdoctoral fellow at Duke. 

 It brings together a flow of attentional information and biological information, such as "is that another person?" Carter observed that in general, participants paid more attention to their human opponent than their computer opponent while playing poker, which is consistent with humans' drive to be social. Throughout the poker game experiment, regions of the brain that are typically thought to be social in nature did not carry information specific to a social context. 

 "The fact that all of these brain regions that should be specifically social are used in other circumstances is a testament to the remarkable flexibility and efficiency of our brains," Carter said. "There are fundamental neural differences between decisions in social and non-social situations," said D-CIDES Director Scott Huettel, the Hubbard professor of psychology and neuroscience at Duke and senior author of the study. 

 "Social information may cause our brain to play by different rules than non-social information, and it will be important for both scientists and policymakers to understand what causes us to approach a decision in a social or a non-social manner. "Understanding how the brain identifies important competitors and collaborators-those people who are most relevant for our future behavior-will lead to new insights into social phenomena like dehumanization and empathy," Huettel added.

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