Krastev Sekoul, McGuire Joseph T, McNeney Denver, Kable Joseph W, Stolle Dietlind, Gidengil Elisabeth, Fellows Lesley K
Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University Montreal, QC, Canada.
Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Front Psychol. 2016 Feb 25;7:264. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00264. eCollection 2016.
The methods of cognitive neuroscience are beginning to be applied to the study of political behavior. The neural substrates of value-based decision-making have been extensively examined in economic contexts; this might provide a powerful starting point for understanding political decision-making. Here, we asked to what extent the neuropolitics literature to date has used conceptual frameworks and experimental designs that make contact with the reward-related approaches that have dominated decision neuroscience. We then asked whether the studies of political behavior that can be considered in this light implicate the brain regions that have been associated with subjective value related to "economic" reward. We performed a systematic literature review to identify papers addressing the neural substrates of political behavior and extracted the fMRI studies reporting behavioral measures of subjective value as defined in decision neuroscience studies of reward. A minority of neuropolitics studies met these criteria and relatively few brain activation foci from these studies overlapped with regions where activity has been related to subjective value. These findings show modest influence of reward-focused decision neuroscience on neuropolitics research to date. Whether the neural substrates of subjective value identified in economic choice paradigms generalize to political choice thus remains an open question. We argue that systematically addressing the commonalities and differences in these two classes of value-based choice will be important in developing a more comprehensive model of the brain basis of human decision-making.
认知神经科学的方法正开始应用于政治行为的研究。基于价值的决策的神经基础已在经济背景下得到广泛研究;这可能为理解政治决策提供一个有力的起点。在此,我们探讨了迄今为止神经政治学文献在多大程度上使用了与主导决策神经科学的奖励相关方法相联系的概念框架和实验设计。然后我们询问,从这个角度来看,可以被考虑的政治行为研究是否涉及与“经济”奖励相关的主观价值所关联的脑区。我们进行了一项系统的文献综述,以确定涉及政治行为神经基础的论文,并提取了功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究,这些研究报告了决策神经科学奖励研究中所定义的主观价值的行为测量。少数神经政治学研究符合这些标准,并且这些研究中相对较少的脑激活焦点与已发现与主观价值相关的区域重叠。这些发现表明,迄今为止,以奖励为重点的决策神经科学对神经政治学研究的影响有限。经济选择范式中确定的主观价值的神经基础是否能推广到政治选择,因此仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。我们认为,系统地探讨这两类基于价值的选择中的共性和差异,对于建立一个更全面的人类决策大脑基础模型至关重要。