Kwak Youngbin, Pearson John, Huettel Scott A
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 12;9(9):e107621. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107621. eCollection 2014.
In social environments, decisions not only determine rewards for oneself but also for others. However, individual differences in pro-social behaviors have been typically studied through self-report. We developed a decision-making paradigm in which participants chose from card decks with differing rewards for themselves and charity; some decks gave similar rewards to both, while others gave higher rewards for one or the other. We used a reinforcement-learning model that estimated each participant's relative weighting of self versus charity reward. As shown both in choices and model parameters, individuals who showed relatively better learning of rewards for charity--compared to themselves--were more likely to engage in pro-social behavior outside of a laboratory setting indicated by self-report. Overall rates of reward learning, however, did not predict individual differences in pro-social tendencies. These results support the idea that biases toward learning about social rewards are associated with one's altruistic tendencies.
在社会环境中,决策不仅决定自身的奖励,也决定他人的奖励。然而,亲社会行为的个体差异通常是通过自我报告来研究的。我们开发了一种决策范式,参与者从对自己和慈善机构有不同奖励的牌组中进行选择;一些牌组对两者给予相似的奖励,而另一些牌组则对其中一方给予更高的奖励。我们使用了一种强化学习模型,该模型估计了每个参与者对自我奖励与慈善奖励的相对权重。正如在选择和模型参数中所显示的那样,与自我奖励相比,那些对慈善奖励表现出相对更好学习能力的个体,更有可能在自我报告所表明的实验室环境之外参与亲社会行为。然而,奖励学习的总体速率并不能预测亲社会倾向的个体差异。这些结果支持了这样一种观点,即对社会奖励学习的偏差与一个人的利他倾向有关。