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社会规范会改变对食物的行为和神经反应。

Social norms shift behavioral and neural responses to foods.

作者信息

Nook Erik C, Zaki Jamil

机构信息

Stanford University.

出版信息

J Cogn Neurosci. 2015 Jul;27(7):1412-26. doi: 10.1162/jocn_a_00795. Epub 2015 Feb 11.

Abstract

Obesity contributes to 2.8 million deaths annually, making interventions to promote healthy eating critical. Although preliminary research suggests that social norms influence eating behavior, the underlying psychological and neural mechanisms of such conformity remain unexplored. We used fMRI to investigate whether group norms shift individuals' preferences for foods at both behavioral and neural levels. Hungry participants rated how much they wanted to eat a series of healthy and unhealthy foods and, after each trial, saw ratings that ostensibly represented their peers' preferences. This feedback was manipulated such that peers appeared to prefer each food more than, less than, or as much as participants themselves. After a delay, participants rerated each food. Participants' second ratings shifted to resemble group norms. Initial consensus, as compared to disagreement, with peers produced activity in the nucleus accumbens, a region associated with reward prediction errors. Furthermore, the strength of this activity predicted the extent to which participants' ratings conformed to peer ratings, suggesting that the value associated with consensus drives social influence. Ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vMPFC), a region associated with value computation, initially responded more strongly to unhealthy, as compared to healthy, foods. However, this effect was "overwritten" by group norms. After individuals learned their peers' preferences, vMPFC responses tracked the popularity, but not the healthfulness, of foods. Furthermore, changes in vMPFC activity tracked social influence over behavioral ratings. These data provide evidence that group norms can shift food preferences, supporting the use of norms-based interventions to promote healthy eating.

摘要

肥胖每年导致280万人死亡,因此采取干预措施促进健康饮食至关重要。尽管初步研究表明社会规范会影响饮食行为,但这种从众行为背后的心理和神经机制仍未得到探索。我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来研究群体规范是否会在行为和神经层面改变个体对食物的偏好。饥饿的参与者对他们想吃一系列健康和不健康食物的程度进行评分,并且在每次试验后,会看到表面上代表其同伴偏好的评分。这种反馈是经过操纵的,使得同伴对每种食物的喜好看起来比参与者自己更多、更少或一样。经过一段时间后,参与者再次对每种食物进行评分。参与者的第二次评分发生了变化,变得与群体规范相似。与同伴意见一致,而非不一致,会使伏隔核产生活动,该区域与奖励预测误差有关。此外,这种活动的强度预测了参与者评分与同伴评分相符的程度,这表明与意见一致相关的价值驱动了社会影响。腹内侧前额叶皮层(vMPFC)是一个与价值计算相关的区域,最初对不健康食物的反应比对健康食物的反应更强烈。然而,这种效应被群体规范“覆盖”了。在个体了解了同伴的偏好后,vMPFC的反应跟踪了食物的受欢迎程度,而非健康程度。此外,vMPFC活动的变化跟踪了社会对行为评分的影响。这些数据提供了证据,表明群体规范可以改变食物偏好,支持使用基于规范的干预措施来促进健康饮食。

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