Cowell Jason M, Decety Jean
The Child Neurosuite, Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637.
The Child Neurosuite, Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Oct 13;112(41):12657-62. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1508832112. Epub 2015 Aug 31.
The nature and underpinnings of infants' seemingly complex, third-party, social evaluations remain highly contentious. Theoretical perspectives oscillate between rich and lean interpretations of the same expressed preferences. Although some argue that infants and toddlers possess a "moral sense" based on core knowledge of the social world, others suggest that social evaluations are hierarchical in nature and the product of an integration of rudimentary general processes such as attention allocation and approach and avoidance. Moreover, these biologically prepared minds interact in social environments that include significant variation, which are likely to impact early social evaluations and behavior. The present study examined the neural underpinnings of and precursors to moral sensitivity in infants and toddlers (n = 73, ages 12-24 mo) through a series of interwoven measures, combining multiple levels of analysis including electrophysiological, eye-tracking, behavioral, and socioenvironmental. Continuous EEG and time-locked event-related potentials (ERPs) and gaze fixation were recorded while children watched characters engaging in prosocial and antisocial actions in two different tasks. All children demonstrated a neural differentiation in both spectral EEG power density modulations and time-locked ERPs when perceiving prosocial or antisocial agents. Time-locked neural differences predicted children's preference for prosocial characters and were influenced by parental values regarding justice and fairness. Overall, this investigation casts light on the fundamental nature of moral cognition, including its underpinnings in general processes such as attention and approach-withdrawal, providing plausible mechanisms of early change and a foundation for forward movement in the field of developmental social neuroscience.
婴儿看似复杂的第三方社会评价的本质和基础仍然极具争议。理论观点在对相同表达偏好的丰富解读和简洁解读之间摇摆不定。尽管一些人认为婴幼儿基于对社会世界的核心知识拥有一种“道德感”,但另一些人则认为社会评价本质上是分层的,是诸如注意力分配以及趋近和回避等基本一般过程整合的产物。此外,这些具有生物准备的思维在包含显著差异的社会环境中相互作用,这可能会影响早期的社会评价和行为。本研究通过一系列相互交织的测量方法,结合包括电生理、眼动追踪、行为和社会环境等多个分析层面,研究了婴幼儿(n = 73,年龄12 - 24个月)道德敏感性的神经基础及其先兆。在儿童观看角色在两项不同任务中进行亲社会和反社会行为时,记录连续脑电图(EEG)和与时间锁定的事件相关电位(ERP)以及注视情况。所有儿童在感知亲社会或反社会主体时,在频谱脑电图功率密度调制和与时间锁定的ERP方面均表现出神经差异。与时间锁定的神经差异预测了儿童对亲社会角色的偏好,并受到父母关于正义和公平价值观的影响。总体而言,这项研究揭示了道德认知的基本本质,包括其在诸如注意力和趋近 - 退缩等一般过程中的基础,为早期变化提供了合理机制,并为发展社会神经科学领域的进一步发展奠定了基础。