Abstract

Many neuroimaging studies on morality focus on functional brain areas that relate to moral judgment specifically in morally negative situations. To date, there have been few studies on differences in brain activity under conditions of being morally good and bad along a continuum. To explore not only the brain regions involved but also their functional connections during moral judgments, we used magnetoencephalography (MEG), which is superior to other imaging modalities for analyzing time-dependent brain activities; only men were recruited because sex differences might be a confounding factor. While analyses showed that general patterns of brain activation and connectivity were similar between morally good judgments (MGJs) and morally bad judgments (MBJs), activation in brain areas that subserve emotion and “theory of mind” on the right hemisphere was larger in MGJ than MBJ conditions. In the left local temporal region, the connectivity between brain areas related to emotion and reward/punishment was stronger in MBJ than MGJ conditions. The time-frequency analysis showed distinct laterality (left hemisphere dominant) occurring during early moral information processing in MBJ conditions compared to MGJ conditions and phase-dependent differences in the appearance of theta waves between MBJ and MGJ conditions. During MBJs, connections within the hemispheric regions were more robust than those between hemispheric regions. These results suggested that the local temporal region on the left hemisphere is more important in the execution of MBJs during early moral valence processing than in that with MGJs. Shorter neuronal connections within the hemisphere may allow to make MBJs punctual.

Highlights

  • The observed differences during this period indicated that these functional brain areas on the right hemisphere were activated by morally good judgments (MGJs) and not morally bad judgments (MBJs)

  • Channels LT31 and LT41 showed significantly higher activation during MBJ than during MGJ from 664 to 734 ms, indicating that these functional brain areas in the left temporal area were activated by MBJs rather than MGJs during this period

  • The present activation analysis and connectivity analysis showed that MBJs activated localized left temporal regions with stronger connectivity between brain areas related to emotion and reward/punishment than MGJs

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Summary

Introduction

While we judge our behaviors as being morally good or bad frequently in our daily lives, the primary concern in many previous neuroimaging studies was related to conditions of being morally bad, and the stimuli were visually presented with sentences and/or pictures that participants were asked to judge with regard to their moral valence (Farrow et al, 2001; Greene et al, 2001; Moll et al, 2002a,b; Heekeren et al, 2005; Takahashi et al, 2008). To simulate situations similar to our daily lives, the latter type of moral study was considered suitable to our present study design where timedependent changes in brain activity while making judgments of a situation being morally good or bad

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