Department of Psychology, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, P.R. China.
Cognition and Human Behavior Key Laboratory of Hunan Province, Changsha, P.R. China.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2024 Feb 1;45(2):e26611. doi: 10.1002/hbm.26611.
Advisors generally evaluate advisee-relevant feedback after advice giving. The response to these feedback-(1) whether the advice is accepted and (2) whether the advice is optimal-usually involves prestige. Prior literature has found that prestige is the basis by which individuals attain a superior status in the social hierarchy. However, whether advisors are motivated to attain a superior status when engaging in advice giving remains uncharacterized. Using event-related potentials, this study investigates how advisors evaluate feedback after giving advice to superior (vs. inferior) status advisees. A social hierarchy was first established based on two advisees (one was ranked as superior status and another as inferior status) as well as participants' performance in a dot-estimation task in which all participants were ranked as medium status. Participants then engaged in a game in which they were assigned roles as advisors to a superior or inferior status advisee. Afterward, the participants received feedback in two phases. In Phase 1, participants were told whether the advisees accepted the advice provided. In Phase 2, the participants were informed whether the advice they provided was correct. In these two phases, when the advisee was of superior status, participants exhibited stronger feedback-related negativity and P300 difference in response to (1) whether their advice was accepted, and (2) whether their advice was correct. Moreover, the P300 was notably larger when the participants' correct advice led to a gain for a superior-status advisee. In the context of advice giving, advisors are particularly motivated to attain a superior status when the feedback involving social hierarchies, which is reflected in higher sensitivity to feedback associated with superior status advisees at earlier and later stages during feedback evaluations in brains.
顾问通常在提供建议后评估与被顾问相关的反馈。对这些反馈的反应(1)建议是否被采纳,以及(2)建议是否最优通常涉及声望。先前的文献发现,声望是个人在社会等级制度中获得更高地位的基础。然而,顾问在提供建议时是否有动力获得更高的地位尚不清楚。本研究使用事件相关电位技术,研究了顾问在向地位较高(相对于地位较低)的被顾问提供建议后如何评估反馈。首先根据两位被顾问(一位被评为地位较高,另一位被评为地位较低)以及参与者在点估计任务中的表现建立社会等级制度,所有参与者的地位均为中等。然后,参与者参与一个游戏,他们被分配为地位较高或地位较低的被顾问的顾问角色。之后,参与者在两个阶段收到反馈。在第一阶段,参与者被告知被顾问是否接受了提供的建议。在第二阶段,参与者被告知他们提供的建议是否正确。在这两个阶段,当被顾问的地位较高时,参与者对(1)他们的建议是否被采纳,以及(2)他们的建议是否正确的反应表现出更强的反馈相关负性和 P300 差异。此外,当参与者的正确建议导致地位较高的被顾问获得收益时,P300 明显更大。在提供建议的背景下,当涉及到涉及社会等级的反馈时,顾问特别有动力获得更高的地位,这反映在大脑中对与地位较高的被顾问相关的反馈的敏感性更高,在反馈评估的早期和晚期阶段。