Abstract

Brain regions associated with the processing of tangible rewards (such as money, food, or sex) are also involved in anticipating social rewards and avoiding social punishment. To date, studies investigating the neural underpinnings of social reward have presented feedback via static or dynamic displays of faces to participants. However, research demonstrates that participants find another type of social stimulus, namely, biological motion, rewarding as well, and exert effort to engage with this type of stimulus. Here we examine whether feedback presented via body gestures in the absence of facial cues also acts as a rewarding stimulus and recruits reward-related brain regions. To achieve this, we investigated the neural underpinnings of anticipating social reward and avoiding social disapproval presented via gestures alone, using a social incentive delay task. As predicted, the anticipation of social reward and avoidance of social disapproval engaged reward-related brain regions, including the nucleus accumbens, in a manner similar to previous studies’ reports of feedback presented via faces and money. This study provides the first evidence that human body motion alone engages brain regions associated with reward processing in a similar manner to other social (i.e. faces) and non-social (i.e. money) rewards. The findings advance our understanding of social motivation in human perception and behavior.

Highlights

  • Humans are an inherently social species, and from an early age, we spend much of our daily lives engaging, interacting, and communicating with others

  • We investigated the neural underpinnings of anticipating social reward and avoiding social disapproval presented via gestures alone, using a social incentive delay task

  • The anticipation of social reward and avoidance of social disapproval engaged reward-related brain regions, including the nucleus accumbens, in a manner similar to previous studies’ reports of feedback presented via faces and money

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Summary

Introduction

Humans are an inherently social species, and from an early age, we spend much of our daily lives engaging, interacting, and communicating with others This strong motivation to engage socially directs our attention to social signals, guides us to participate in behaviors that help us to establish, maintain, and enhance our relationships with others, and allows us to enjoy social interactions and to find them rewarding (Chevallier et al, 2012). Such information allows a perceiver to decide whether to engage in, or to avoid, social interaction with another individual

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