不公平厌恶
亲社会行为
危害
认知
心理学
分配正义
神经影像学
社会心理学
风险厌恶(心理学)
利他主义(生物学)
再分配(选举)
认知心理学
不平等
经济正义
政治学
神经科学
经济
微观经济学
数理经济学
数学分析
政治
法学
期望效用假设
数学
作者
Yue Li,Jie Hu,Christian C. Ruff,Xiaolin Zhou
标识
DOI:10.1101/2022.05.02.490266
摘要
Abstract In the history of humanity, most conflicts within and between societies have originated from perceived inequality in resource distribution. How humans achieve and maintain distributive justice has therefore been an intensely studied issue. However, most research on the corresponding psychological processes has focused on inequality aversion and has been largely agnostic of other motives that may either align or oppose this behavioral tendency. Here we provide behavioral, computational, and neuroimaging evidence that distribution decisions are guided by three distinct motives - inequality aversion, harm aversion, and rank reversal aversion – that interact and in fact can also deter individuals from pursuing equality. At the neural level, we show that these three motives are encoded by separate neural systems, compete for representation in various brain areas processing equality and harm signals, and are integrated in the striatum, which functions as a crucial hub for translating the motives to behavior. Our findings provide a comprehensive framework for understanding the cognitive and biological processes by which multiple prosocial motives are coordinated in the brain to guide redistribution behaviors. This framework enhances our understanding of the brain mechanisms underlying equality-related behavior, suggests possible neural origins of individual differences in social preferences, and provides a new pathway to understand the cognitive and neural basis of clinical disorders with impaired social functions.
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