The neural computation of human prosocial choices in complex motivational states

•Activating different social motives simultaneously can enhance prosocial choices.•Multi-motive combinations change initial prosocial biases.•Dorso-striatal activation increases with larger increase of prosocial bias.•Multi-motive combinations modulate relative response caution. Motives motivate hum...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Fla.), 2022-02, Vol.247, p.118827-118827, Article 118827
Hauptverfasser: Saulin, Anne, Horn, Ulrike, Lotze, Martin, Kaiser, Jochen, Hein, Grit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Activating different social motives simultaneously can enhance prosocial choices.•Multi-motive combinations change initial prosocial biases.•Dorso-striatal activation increases with larger increase of prosocial bias.•Multi-motive combinations modulate relative response caution. Motives motivate human behavior. Most behaviors are driven by more than one motive, yet it is unclear how different motives interact and how such motive combinations affect the neural computation of the behaviors they drive. To answer this question, we induced two prosocial motives simultaneously (multi-motive condition) and separately (single motive conditions). After the different motive inductions, participants performed the same choice task in which they allocated points in favor of the other person (prosocial choice) or in favor of themselves (egoistic choice). We used fMRI to assess prosocial choice-related brain responses and drift diffusion modeling to specify how motive combinations affect individual components of the choice process. Our results showed that the combination of the two motives in the multi-motive condition increased participants’ choice biases prior to the behavior itself. On the neural level, these changes in initial prosocial bias were associated with neural responses in the bilateral dorsal striatum. In contrast, the efficiency of the prosocial decision process was comparable between the multi-motive and the single-motive conditions. These findings provide insights into the computation of prosocial choices in complex motivational states, the motivational setting that drives most human behaviors.
ISSN:1053-8119
1095-9572
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118827