Institute for Nuclear Sciences Applied to Health (ICNAS), Coimbra Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Translational Research (CIBIT), University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Faculty of Medicine (FMUC), University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Sci Rep. 2024 Jun 8;14(1):13222. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-63469-y.
When a single choice impacts on life outcomes, faculties to make ethical judgments come into play. Here we studied decisions in a real-life setting involving life-and-death outcomes that affect others and the decision-maker as well. We chose a genuine situation where prior training and expertise play a role: firefighting in life-threatening situations. By studying the neural correlates of dilemmas involving life-saving decisions, using realistic firefighting situations, allowed us to go beyond previously used hypothetical dilemmas, while addressing the role of expertise and the use of coping strategies (n = 47). We asked the question whether the neural underpinnings of deontologically based decisions are affected by expertise. These realistic life-saving dilemmas activate the same core reward and affective processing network, in particular the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens and amygdala, irrespective of prior expertise, thereby supporting general domain theories of ethical decision-making. We found that brain activity in the hippocampus and insula parametrically increased as the risk increased. Connectivity analysis showed a larger directed influence of the insula on circuits related to action selection in non-experts, which were slower than experts in non rescuing decisions. Relative neural activity related to the decision to rescue or not, in the caudate nucleus, insula and anterior cingulate cortex was negatively associated with coping strategies, in experts (firefighters) suggesting practice-based learning. This shows an association between activity and expert-related usage of coping strategies. Expertise enables salience network activation as a function of behavioural coping dimensions, with a distinct connectivity profile when facing life-rescuing dilemmas.
当一个单一的选择会影响生命结果时,做出伦理判断的能力就会发挥作用。在这里,我们研究了涉及生死结果的现实生活情境中的决策,这些结果会影响他人和决策者。我们选择了一个真实的情况,在这种情况下,先前的培训和专业知识起着作用:在危及生命的情况下进行消防。通过研究涉及救生决策的困境的神经相关性,使用现实的消防情况,我们不仅可以超越以前使用的假设性困境,还可以解决专业知识的作用和应对策略的使用(n=47)。我们问了一个问题,即基于义务的决策的神经基础是否受到专业知识的影响。这些现实的救生困境激活了相同的核心奖励和情感处理网络,特别是腹内侧前额叶皮层、伏隔核和杏仁核,而不管先前的专业知识如何,从而支持道德决策的一般领域理论。我们发现,随着风险的增加,海马体和岛叶的大脑活动呈参数性增加。连接分析显示,在非专家中,岛叶对与行动选择相关的回路的直接影响更大,而在非救援决策中,非专家的反应速度比专家慢。在尾状核、岛叶和前扣带回皮质中,与救援或不救援决策相关的相对神经活动与应对策略呈负相关,这在专家(消防员)中表明了基于实践的学习。这表明活动与专家相关的应对策略的使用之间存在关联。专业知识使突显网络能够根据行为应对维度进行激活,在面对救生困境时具有独特的连接模式。