Abstract

Emotions have been shown to exert influences on decision making during economic exchanges. Here we investigate the underlying neural mechanisms of a training regimen which is hypothesized to promote emotional awareness, specifically mindfulness training (MT). We test the hypothesis that MT increases cooperative economic decision making using fMRI in a randomized longitudinal design involving 8weeks of either MT or active control training (CT). We find that MT results in an increased willingness to cooperate indexed by higher acceptance rates to unfair monetary offers in the Ultimatum Game. While controlling for acceptance rates of monetary offers between intervention groups, subjects in the MT and CT groups show differential brain activation patterns. Specifically, a subset of more cooperative MT subjects displays increased activation in the septal region, an area linked to social attachment, which may drive the increased willingness to express cooperative behavior in the MT cohort. Furthermore, MT resulted in attenuated activity in anterior insula compared with the CT group in response to unfair monetary offers post-training, which may suggest that MT enables greater ability to effectively regulate the anterior insula and thereby promotes social cooperation. Finally, functional connectivity analyses show a coupling between the septal region and posterior insula in the MT group, suggesting an integration of interoceptive inputs. Together, these results highlight that MT may be employed in contexts where emotional regulation is required to promote social cooperation.

Highlights

  • Human altruism and social attachment have evolved to promote cooperation and prosocial behavior beyond bonds of kinship (Fehr and Fischbacher, 2003; Trivers, 1971)

  • Subjects were paid according to the decisions they made on three randomly selected rounds during the Ultimatum Game to make sure that subjects made motivated choices during the task, which is a standard procedure in the field of neuroeconomics (Montague and Berns, 2002)

  • The results from this study extend our knowledge of the neural basis of cooperation in a socioeconomic context by suggesting that prosocial behavior may be promoted through psychological behavioral interventions, such as mindfulness training (MT)

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Summary

Introduction

Human altruism and social attachment have evolved to promote cooperation and prosocial behavior beyond bonds of kinship (Fehr and Fischbacher, 2003; Trivers, 1971). In the current longitudinal randomized controlled fMRI study using the Ultimatum Game, we compare a subject cohort who received 8 weeks of MT to a subject cohort who received 8 weeks of active control training (CT) in the form of physical relaxation training. While no study has directly evaluated the effects of mindfulness training in a longitudinal design on cooperative behavior, recent work has studied the effects of compassion training on prosocial behavior (Klimecki et al, 2013; Leiberg et al, 2011; Weng et al, 2013) In these studies, direct effects of altruistic punishment during social exchange (for a review see Rilling et al, 2008) or specific effects of MT per se was not examined. Based on previous research showing that the septal region during social exchange encodes altruistic, prosocial behavior, and unconditional trusting behavior (Harbaugh et al, 2007; Moll et al, 2006; Krueger et al, 2007), we hypothesize that neural signatures in the septal region will be engaged as a function of MT in contrast to CT and provide neural support to the behavioral hypothesis of increased acceptance rates in the MT group

Materials and methods
Experimental procedures
Procedure for MT
Procedure for CT
Findings
Discussion
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