Abstract

Research indicates that the posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC) functions as a ‘neural alarm’ complex broadly involved in registering threats and helping to muster relevant responses. Holbrook and colleagues investigated whether pMFC similarly mediates ideological threat responses, finding that downregulating pMFC via transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) caused (i) less avowed religious belief despite being reminded of death and (ii) less group bias despite encountering a sharp critique of the national in-group. While suggestive, these findings were limited by the absence of a non-threat comparison condition and reliance on sham rather than control TMS. Here, in a pre-registered replication and extension, we downregulated pMFC or a control region (MT/V5) and then primed participants with either a reminder of death or a threat-neutral topic. As mentioned previously, participants reminded of death reported less religious belief when pMFC was downregulated. No such effect of pMFC downregulation was observed in the neutral condition, consistent with construing pMFC as monitoring for salient threats (e.g. death) and helping to recruit ideological responses (e.g. enhanced religious belief). However, no effect of downregulating pMFC on group bias was observed, possibly due to reliance on a collegiate in-group framing rather than a national framing as in the prior study.

Highlights

  • As both lived experience and neuroscientific research attest, much of our mental life is characterized by mind-wandering and automatic behavior (Vatansever et al, 2017)

  • The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex component of the posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC) has been implicated in relatively low-level cognitive control functions such as those measured in the Stroop, Flanker, divided attention or go/nogo tasks (Bush et al, 2002)

  • As the methods for modulating pMFC utilized in the present experiment do not discriminate between subdivisions, we will refer in a broad sense to pMFC as instantiating an ‘alarm’, which prompts a variety of adjustments to anomalies, discrepancies or threats of various types

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Summary

Introduction

As both lived experience and neuroscientific research attest, much of our mental life is characterized by mind-wandering and automatic behavior (Vatansever et al, 2017). In line with construing pMFC as generating an alarm signal that recruits solutions to problems as they arise, experimental downregulation of pMFC activity via TMS reduces choice-induced preference change (Izuma et al, 2015) In this instance, the problem of disagreement between one’s choices and one’s preferences (e.g. having rejected items that were liked), which typically leads individuals to update their preferences in line with their choices (e.g. to retrospectively decrease liking of the rejected items), appears causally linked to pMFC: when the capacity to activate pMFC is downregulated, choiceinduced preference change diminishes. Downregulating pMFC significantly decreased both avowed religious belief and derogation of the critical outgroup member

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