White Stuart F, Zhao Hui, Leong Kelly Kimiko, Smetana Judith G, Nucci Larry P, Blair R James R
Department of Health and Human Services, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, NE, USA.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2017 Dec;17(6):1114-1128. doi: 10.3758/s13415-017-0536-6.
The degree to which social norms are processed by a unitary system or dissociable systems remains debated. Much research on children's social-cognitive judgments has supported the distinction between "moral" (harm/welfare-based) and "conventional" norms. However, the extent to which these norms are processed by dissociable neural systems remains unclear. To address this issue, 23 healthy participants were scanned with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they rated the wrongness of harm/welfare-based and conventional transgressions and neutral vignettes. Activation significantly greater than the neutral vignette baseline was observed in regions implicated in decision-making regions including rostral/ventral medial frontal, anterior insula and dorsomedial frontal cortices when evaluating both harm/welfare-based and social-conventional transgressions. Greater activation when rating harm/welfare-based relative to social-conventional transgressions was seen through much of ACC and bilateral inferior frontal gyrus. Greater activation was observed in superior temporal gyrus, bilateral middle temporal gyrus, left PCC, and temporal-parietal junction when rating social-conventional transgressions relative to harm/welfare-based transgressions. These data suggest that decisions regarding the wrongness of actions, irrespective of whether they involve care/harm-based or conventional transgressions, recruit regions generally implicated in affect-based decision-making. However, there is neural differentiation between harm/welfare-based and conventional transgressions. This may reflect the particular importance of processing the intent of transgressors of conventional norms and perhaps the greater emotional content or salience of harm/welfare-based transgressions.
社会规范是由单一系统还是可分离系统进行处理,这一问题仍存在争议。许多关于儿童社会认知判断的研究支持了“道德”(基于伤害/福利)规范和“习俗”规范之间的区别。然而,这些规范在多大程度上由可分离的神经系统进行处理仍不清楚。为了解决这个问题,对23名健康参与者进行了功能磁共振成像(fMRI)扫描,同时他们对基于伤害/福利的违规行为、习俗违规行为以及中性短文的错误程度进行评分。在评估基于伤害/福利的违规行为和社会习俗违规行为时,在包括喙部/腹侧内侧额叶、前脑岛和背内侧额叶皮质等参与决策的区域观察到显著高于中性短文基线的激活。在评估基于伤害/福利的违规行为相对于社会习俗违规行为时,前扣带回和双侧额下回的大部分区域观察到更大的激活。在评估社会习俗违规行为相对于基于伤害/福利的违规行为时,颞上回、双侧颞中回、左侧楔前叶和颞顶联合区观察到更大的激活。这些数据表明,关于行为错误性的决策,无论它们涉及基于关爱/伤害的违规行为还是习俗违规行为,都会激活通常参与基于情感的决策的区域。然而,基于伤害/福利的违规行为和习俗违规行为之间存在神经差异。这可能反映了处理习俗规范违规者意图的特殊重要性,也可能反映了基于伤害/福利的违规行为具有更大的情感内容或显著性。