Abstract

Although humans constitute an exceptionally cooperative species that is able to collaborate on large scales for common benefits, cooperation remains a longstanding puzzle in biological and social science. Moreover, cooperation is not always related to resource allocation and gains but is often related to losses. Revealing the neurological mechanisms and brain regions related to cooperation is important for reinforcing cooperation-related gains and losses. Recent neuroscience studies have found that the decision-making process of cooperation is involved in the function of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC). In the present study, we aimed to investigate the causal role of the VMPFC in cooperative behavior concerning gains and losses through the application of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). We integrated cooperation-related gains and losses into a unified paradigm. Based on the paradigm, we researched cooperation behaviors regarding gains in standard public good games and introduced public bad games to investigate cooperative behavior regarding losses. Our study revealed that the VMPFC plays different roles concerning gains and losses in situations requiring cooperation. Anodal stimulation over the VMPFC decreased cooperative behavior in public bad games, whereas stimulation over the VMPFC did not change cooperative behavior in public good games. Moreover, participants’ beliefs about others’ cooperation were changed in public bad games but not in public good games. Finally, participants’ cooperative attitudes were not influenced in the public good or public bad games under the three stimulation conditions.

Highlights

  • Humans collaborate on large scales and constitute an exceptionally cooperative species that is able to cooperate for common benefits (Gintis, 2003; Boyd and Richerson, 2009; Gächter et al, 2017)

  • We investigated the causal role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC) in cooperative behavior concerning gains and losses through the application of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS)

  • Humans constitute an exceptionally cooperative species that is able to collaborate on large–scales for common benefits, the cooperative behavior of humans remains a longstanding puzzle to some extent

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Summary

Introduction

Humans collaborate on large scales and constitute an exceptionally cooperative species that is able to cooperate for common benefits (Gintis, 2003; Boyd and Richerson, 2009; Gächter et al, 2017). Role of VMPFC for Cooperation (Fehr and Gächter, 2002; Fehr and Fischbacher, 2003; Gintis et al, 2003; Colman, 2006; Boyd and Richerson, 2009; Foley and Gamble, 2009). Indirect reciprocity theory proposes that everyone in a group is continually assessed and that cooperation is channeled toward the ‘‘valuable’’ members of the community (Nowak and Sigmund, 1998; Wedekind and Milinski, 2000; Leimar and Hammerstein, 2001). Signaling theory suggests that cooperation evolves because it involves an honest signal of the community member’s quality and results in advantageous alliances (Gintis et al, 2001; Higham, 2014; McAndrew, 2018)

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