Pollerhoff Lena, Saulin Anne, Kurtz Marcel, Stietz Julia, Peng Xue-Rui, Hein Grit, Tusche Anita, Kanske Philipp, Li Shu-Chen, Reiter Andrea M F
Lifespan Developmental Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany.
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University Hospital Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2025 Apr 14;15(1):12776. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-96656-6.
Previous research suggests that older adults may display more prosocial behavior than younger adults. However, recent meta-analyses indicate that effects are heterogeneous, may be small, and are influenced by how prosociality is measured. Further, the precise cognitive and computational factors contributing to age-related differences in prosocial behavior remain largely unknown. In this study, we utilized a modified dictator game to combine a value-based decision framework with Bayesian hierarchical drift-diffusion modeling to investigate prosocial decision-making in a sample of younger (n = 63) and older adults (n = 48). We observed differences in how older and younger individuals incorporate information corresponding to potential gains for themselves (self) and another person (other) to reach a (potentially prosocial) decision. Younger adults integrated values for benefits for themselves and others in the decision-making process and demonstrated increased decision-making efficiency by effectively integrating both sources of information. In contrast, older adults showed improved decision-making efficiency when solely considering values for self and others separately. Interestingly, individual differences in the capacity of inhibitory control in older adults moderated the observed age effects: older adults with stronger inhibitory control abilities made decisions based on the integrated information of benefits for themselves and others. Together, these findings offer new insights into the behavioral and computational mechanisms influencing age effects in prosocial decision-making.
先前的研究表明,老年人可能比年轻人表现出更多的亲社会行为。然而,最近的荟萃分析表明,这些影响是异质的,可能很小,并且受到亲社会性测量方式的影响。此外,导致亲社会行为中与年龄相关差异的精确认知和计算因素在很大程度上仍然未知。在本研究中,我们使用了一种改良的独裁者博弈,将基于价值的决策框架与贝叶斯分层漂移扩散模型相结合,以研究63名年轻人和48名老年人样本中的亲社会决策。我们观察到,老年人和年轻人在整合与自身(自我)和他人(他人)潜在收益相对应的信息以做出(潜在亲社会)决策方面存在差异。年轻人在决策过程中整合了自身和他人利益的价值,并通过有效整合这两种信息来源提高了决策效率。相比之下,老年人在单独考虑自我和他人的价值时,决策效率有所提高。有趣的是,老年人抑制控制能力的个体差异调节了观察到的年龄效应:抑制控制能力较强的老年人根据自身和他人利益的综合信息做出决策。总之,这些发现为影响亲社会决策中年龄效应的行为和计算机制提供了新的见解。