Department of Economics and Laboratory for Social and Neural Systems Research, University of Zurich, CH-8006 Zurich, Switzerland
Department of Economics and Laboratory for Social and Neural Systems Research, University of Zurich, CH-8006 Zurich, Switzerland.
J Neurosci. 2021 Jan 6;41(1):144-152. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0926-20.2020. Epub 2020 Nov 17.
Humans are less likely to learn from individuals belonging to a different group (outgroup) than from individuals of their own group (ingroup), yet the source of this societally relevant deficit has remained unclear. Here we used neuroimaging and computational modeling to investigate how people learn from observing the actions and outcomes of ingroup and outgroup demonstrators. Politically left-wing male and female participants performed worse when observing computer-simulated actions they believed were from a right-wing outgroup member compared with those from a left-wing ingroup member. A control experiment in which participants observed choices from a nonhuman agent confirmed that this performance difference reflected an outgroup deficit, rather than an ingroup gain. Accounting for the outgroup deficit, a computational model showed that participants relied less on information from outgroup actions compared with ingroup actions, while learning from outgroup outcomes was not impaired. At the neural level, the differences in observational ingroup versus outgroup learning were reflected in lateral prefrontal activity. The stronger the activity in this region, the more strongly participants weighed ingroup compared with outgroup learning signals (action prediction errors), which formally captured deficits in outgroup learning. Together, our work provides a computational and neural account of why people learn less from observing outgroups. Learning from observing others is an efficient way to acquire knowledge. In our globalized world, "the others" often are people from a different social group (outgroup). There is evidence that people learn less from observing outgroup individuals compared with individuals from their own group (ingroup). However, the source of this outgroup deficit in observational learning remained unknown, which limits our chances to improve intergroup learning. Our results showed that participants rely less on observed outgroup actions compared with ingroup actions, while learning from outgroup outcomes is not impaired. On the neural level, this outgroup deficit was reflected in the activation of the inferior frontal gyrus. These findings imply that intergroup learning should rely on observing outcomes, rather than actions.
人类从属于不同群体(外群体)的个体那里学习的可能性比从自己群体(内群体)的个体那里学习的可能性要小,但这种与社会相关的缺陷的根源仍然不清楚。在这里,我们使用神经影像学和计算建模来研究人们如何从观察内群体和外群体示范者的行为和结果中学习。政治上左倾的男性和女性参与者在观察他们认为来自右翼外群体成员的计算机模拟行为时表现较差,而不是来自左翼内群体成员的行为。一个控制实验中,参与者观察来自非人类代理的选择,证实了这种表现差异反映了外群体的缺陷,而不是内群体的优势。在考虑到外群体的缺陷后,一个计算模型显示,与内群体的行为相比,参与者对外群体行为的信息依赖较少,而对外群体结果的学习不受影响。在神经水平上,观察内群体与外群体学习的差异反映在外侧前额叶活动中。该区域的活动越强,参与者对内群体与外群体学习信号(动作预测误差)的权重就越强,这正式捕捉到了外群体学习的缺陷。总之,我们的工作提供了一个计算和神经解释,说明为什么人们从观察外群体中学到的东西更少。从观察他人中学习是获取知识的一种有效方式。在我们全球化的世界中,“其他人”通常是来自不同社会群体(外群体)的人。有证据表明,与来自自己群体(内群体)的个体相比,人们从观察外群体个体中学到的东西更少。然而,这种观察学习中外群体的缺陷来源仍不清楚,这限制了我们改善群体间学习的机会。我们的研究结果表明,与内群体行为相比,参与者对外群体行为的依赖较少,而对外群体结果的学习不受影响。在神经水平上,这种外群体缺陷反映在额下回的激活上。这些发现意味着,群体间学习应该依赖于观察结果,而不是行为。