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首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Human Neuroscience >How Do Acquired Political Identities Influence Our Neural Processing toward Others within the Context of a Trust Game?
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How Do Acquired Political Identities Influence Our Neural Processing toward Others within the Context of a Trust Game?

机译:在信任博弈的背景下,获得的政治身份如何影响我们对他人的神经处理?

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摘要

Trust is essential for mutually beneficial human interactions in economic exchange and politics and people’s social identities notably have dramatic effects on trust behaviors toward others. Previous literature concerning social identities generally suggests that people tend to show in-group favoritism toward members who share the same identity. However, how our brains process signals of identity while facing uncertain situations in interpersonal interactions remains largely unclear. To address this issue, we performed an fMRI experiment with 54 healthy adults who belonged to two identity groups of opposing political orientations. The identity information of participants was extracted from a large-scale social survey on the 2012 Taiwan presidential election. Accordingly, participants were categorized as either the Kuomintang (KMT) or the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) supporters. During the experiment, participants played trust games with computer agents with labels of the same or the opposing political identity. Interestingly, our results suggest that the behaviors of the two groups cannot be equally attributed to in-group favoritism. Behaviorally, only the DPP supporter group showed a significant trust preference toward in-group members, which did not hold for the KMT supporter group. Consistently, neurophysiological findings further revealed that only the DPP supporter group showed neuronal responses to both unexpected negative feedback from in-group members in anterior insula, temporoparietal junction, and dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, as well as to unexpected rewards from out-group members in caudate. These findings therefore suggest that acquired identities play a more complex role in modulating people’s social expectation in interpersonal trust behaviors under identity-relevant contexts.
机译:信任对于人类在经济交流和政治中的互利互动至关重要,而人们的社会身份尤其会对对他人的信任行为产生巨大影响。先前有关社会身份的文献通常表明,人们倾向于对拥有相同身份的成员表现出集团内偏爱。但是,在面对不确定的人际互动时,我们的大脑如何处理身份信号仍然很不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们对54名健康成年人进行了功能磁共振成像实验,这些成年人属于两个政治倾向相反的身份群体。参与者的身份信息摘自2012年台湾总统大选的大规模社会调查。因此,参与者被分为国民党(KMT)或民进党(DPP)的支持者。在实验过程中,参与者与带有相同或相反政治身份标签的计算机代理人玩了信任游戏。有趣的是,我们的结果表明,两组的行为不能等同地归因于组内偏爱。从行为上讲,只有DPP支持者组对组内成员表现出显着的信任偏好,而KMT支持者组则没有。一致地,神经生理学结果进一步表明,只有DPP支持者组对前岛,颞顶交界和背外侧前额叶皮层内组成员的意外负反馈以及对外侧前额叶皮质的意外奖励均显示出神经元反应。尾状。因此,这些发现表明,在与身份相关的环境下,获得的身份在调节人们对人际信任行为的社会期望中起着更为复杂的作用。

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