Abstract

Our decisions often have consequences for other people. Hence, self-interest and other-regarding motives are traded off in many daily-life situations. Interindividually, people differ in their tendency to behave prosocial. These differences are captured by the concept of social value orientation (SVO), which assumes stable, trait-like tendencies to act selfish or prosocial. This study investigates group differences in prosocial decision making and addresses the question of whether prosocial individuals act intuitively and selfish individuals instead need to control egoistic impulses to behave prosocially. We address this question via the interpretation of neuronal and behavioral indicators. In the present fMRI-study participants were grouped into prosocial- and selfish participants. They made decisions in multiple modified Dictator-Games (DG) that addressed self- and other-regarding motives to a varying extent (self gain, non-costly social gain, mutual gain, costly social gain). Selfish participants reacted faster than prosocial participants in all conditions, except for decisions in the non-costly social condition, in which selfish participants displayed the longest decision times. In the total sample we found enhanced neural activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC/BA 9) during decisions that resulted in non-costly social benefits. These areas have been implicated in cognitive control processes and deliberative value integration. Decisively, these effects were stronger in the group of selfish individuals. We believe that selfish individuals require more explicit and deliberative processing during prosocial decisions. Our results are compatible with the assumption that prosocial decisions in prosocials are more intuitive, whereas they demand more active reflection in selfish individuals.

Highlights

  • Prosocial behavior, i.e., behavior which benefits other individuals is a relative unique human ability

  • In the total sample we found enhanced neural activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex during decisions that resulted in non-costly social benefits

  • We found that prosocials more frequently choose to allocate money to the receiver despite own losses in the costly social condition upon comparison to selfish pariticipants

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Summary

Introduction

I.e., behavior which benefits other individuals is a relative unique human ability. Neurocognitive research has recently begun to identify brain processes which are related to prosocial behavior and they have found that prosocial decisions in persons with a prosocial personality trait are associated with activity in subcortical brain regions that have been implied in automated, intuitive processing (Haruno and Frith, 2010; Haruno et al., 2014). Under the assumption that these individuals have a weaker default tendency to act prosocial we hypothesized that they would need extra cognitive resources to do so manifesting in longer reaction times and stronger activity in brain areas that are associated with deliberative decision making such as the prefrontal cortex

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