Department of Psychology, University of Michigan.
J Exp Psychol Gen. 2014 Feb;143(1):62-70. doi: 10.1037/a0031696. Epub 2013 Feb 11.
To secure the interest of the personal self (vs. social others) is considered a fundamental human motive, but the nature of the motivation to secure the self-interest is not well understood. To address this issue, we assessed electrocortical responses of European Americans and Asians as they performed a flanker task while instructed to earn as many reward points as possible either for the self or for their same-sex friend. For European Americans, error-related negativity (ERN)-an event-related-potential component contingent on error responses--was significantly greater in the self condition than in the friend condition. Moreover, post-error slowing--an index of cognitive control to reduce errors--was observed in the self condition but not in the friend condition. Neither of these self-centric effects was observed among Asians, consistent with prior cross-cultural behavioral evidence. Interdependent self-construal mediated the effect of culture on the ERN self-centric effect. Our findings provide the first evidence for a neural correlate of self-centric motivation, which becomes more salient outside of interdependent social relations.
确保个人自身利益(与社会他人相对)被认为是人类的基本动机,但对于确保自身利益的动机本质,人们的理解并不清楚。为了解决这个问题,我们评估了欧洲裔美国人和亚洲人在执行侧抑制任务时的脑电反应,他们被指示尽可能为自己或同性朋友获得更多的奖励积分。对于欧洲裔美国人来说,错误相关负波(ERN)——一种与错误反应相关的事件相关电位成分——在自我条件下显著大于朋友条件。此外,在自我条件下观察到了错误后减速——一种减少错误的认知控制指标——但在朋友条件下没有观察到。这些以自我为中心的效应在亚洲人中都没有观察到,这与先前的跨文化行为证据一致。相互依存的自我建构调节了文化对 ERN 自我中心效应的影响。我们的研究结果为自我中心动机的神经相关提供了第一个证据,这种动机在相互依存的社会关系之外更加突出。