Abstract

In this study, Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was conducted to investigate the mechanisms by which the brain activity in a complex social comparison context. One true subject and two pseudo-subjects were asked to complete a simple number estimate task at the same time which including upward and downward comparisons. Two categories of social comparison rewards (fair and unfair rewards distributions) were mainly presented by comparing the true subject with other two pseudo-subjects. Particularly, there were five conditions of unfair distribution when all the three subjects were correct but received different rewards. Behavioral data indicated that the ability to self-regulate was important in satisfaction judgment when the subject perceived an unfair reward distribution. fMRI data indicated that the interaction between the ventral striatum and the prefrontal cortex was important in self-regulation under specific conditions in complex social comparison, especially under condition of reward processing when there were two different reward values and the subject failed to exhibit upward comparison.

Highlights

  • Social comparison is considered as an important link between social context and self-evaluation [1]

  • The behavioral data observed under fair conditions showed that the true subject was more dissatisfied in C2 than in C1 and C4

  • The behavioral data observed under unfair conditions showed that the true subject was more satisfied with in C7, C8, and C9 than in C5 and C6

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Summary

Introduction

Social comparison is considered as an important link between social context and self-evaluation [1]. Such comparison is described as a central and ubiquitous phenomenon in human societies [2,3]. Other studies have reported a close link between social comparison and individual depression, indicating the importance of social comparison as a component of stress treatment [1,7,8,9]. Negative emotions (such as depression and low self-esteem) arise from upward comparison, which occurs when such individuals feel threatened by these superior people. Downward comparison is common [7] because this response represents a stress-coping mechanism that negatively events affects the well-being of individuals [11,12]

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