Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Jun 20;8(6):e68884. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068884. Print 2013.
The ability to initiate and sustain trust is critical to health and well-being. Willingness to trust is in part determined by the reputation of the putative trustee, gained via direct interactions or indirectly through word of mouth. Few studies have examined how the reputation of others is instantiated in the brain during trust decisions. Here we use an event-related functional MRI (fMRI) design to examine what neural signals correspond to experimentally manipulated reputations acquired in direct interactions during trust decisions. We hypothesized that the caudate (dorsal striatum) and putamen (ventral striatum) and amygdala would signal differential reputations during decision-making. Twenty-nine healthy adults underwent fMRI scanning while completing an iterated Trust Game as trusters with three fictive trustee partners who had different tendencies to reciprocate (i.e., likelihood of rewarding the truster), which were learned over multiple exchanges with real-time feedback. We show that the caudate (both left and right) signals reputation during trust decisions, such that caudate is more active to partners with two types of "bad" reputations, either indifferent partners (who reciprocate 50% of the time) or unfair partners (who reciprocate 25% of the time), than to those with "good" reputations (who reciprocate 75% of the time). Further, individual differences in caudate activity related to biases in trusting behavior in the most uncertain situation, i.e. when facing an indifferent partner. We also report on other areas that were activated by reputation at p < 0.05 whole brain corrected. Our findings suggest that the caudate is involved in signaling and integrating reputations gained through experience into trust decisions, demonstrating a neural basis for this key social process.
建立和维持信任的能力对健康和幸福至关重要。信任的意愿部分取决于假定受托人的声誉,这是通过直接互动或通过口碑间接获得的。很少有研究探讨在信任决策过程中,他人的声誉是如何在大脑中体现的。在这里,我们使用事件相关功能磁共振成像(fMRI)设计来检查在信任决策过程中,通过直接互动获得的实验操纵的声誉在大脑中对应的神经信号。我们假设尾状核(背侧纹状体)和壳核(腹侧纹状体)和杏仁核在决策过程中会发出不同的声誉信号。29 名健康成年人在完成迭代信任游戏时接受 fMRI 扫描,作为信任者与三个虚构的受托人伙伴互动,这些受托人伙伴在多次互动中具有不同的互惠倾向(即,奖励信任者的可能性),并实时反馈。我们表明,尾状核(左右两侧)在信任决策中发出声誉信号,即尾状核对具有两种“不良”声誉的伙伴(要么是冷漠的伙伴,他们的互惠反应率为 50%,要么是不公平的伙伴,他们的互惠反应率为 25%)的反应比那些声誉良好的伙伴(他们的互惠反应率为 75%)更为活跃。此外,尾状核活动的个体差异与最不确定情况下的信任行为偏差有关,即在面对冷漠的伙伴时。我们还报告了在声誉激活的其他区域,在全脑校正的 p<0.05 水平下。我们的发现表明,尾状核参与信号传递和将通过经验获得的声誉整合到信任决策中,为这一关键社会过程提供了神经基础。