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Published May 12, 2011 | public
Journal Article

Triangulating the Neural, Psychological, and Economic Bases of Guilt Aversion

Abstract

Why do people often choose to cooperate when they can better serve their interests by acting selfishly? One potential mechanism is that the anticipation of guilt can motivate cooperative behavior. We utilize a formal model of this process in conjunction with fMRI to identify brain regions that mediate cooperative behavior while participants decided whether or not to honor a partner's trust. We observed increased activation in the insula, supplementary motor area, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC), and temporal parietal junction when participants were behaving consistent with our model, and found increased activity in the ventromedial PFC, dorsomedial PFC, and nucleus accumbens when they chose to abuse trust and maximize their financial reward. This study demonstrates that a neural system previously implicated in expectation processing plays a critical role in assessing moral sentiments that in turn can sustain human cooperation in the face of temptation.

Additional Information

© 2011 Elsevier Inc. Accepted 25 February 2011. Published: May 11, 2011. Available online 11 May 2011. We thank Matt Kleinman for his help in collecting the data and Drs. Anouk Scheres, James Rilling, and Lynn Nadel for their helpful comments. We would like to acknowledge funding from the National Institute of Aging (R21AG030768) to A.G.S., the National Institute of Mental Health (R03MH077058) to A.G.S. and (F31MH085465) to L.J.C., and the National Science Foundation to M.D.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023