Resisting the Power of Temptations The Right Prefrontal Cortex and Self-Control Knock, D. & Erst, F. (2007). Resisting the power of temptations: The right.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ultimatum Game Two players bargain (anonymously) to divide a fixed amount between them. P1 (proposer) offers a division of the “pie” P2 (responder) decides.
Advertisements

Transcranial magnetic stimulation of the occipital pole interferes with verbal processing in blind subjects Amir Amedi, Agnes Floel, Stefan Knecht, Ehud.
TMS-evoked EEG responses in symptomatic and recovered patients with mild traumatic brain injury Jussi Tallus 1, Pantelis Lioumis 2, Heikki Hämäläinen 3,
Neural Basis of Cognition Lecture 6 Learning and Memory, Part II.
Pre-frontal cortex and Executive Function Squire et al Ch 52.
Chapter 30 Behavioral Economics Behavioral economics uses some insights from psychology to study how consumers actually make choices. These choices may.
Spatial Neglect and Attention Networks
M. Bhatt & C. Camerer Games and Economic Behavior, 2005.
Uncertainty and Consumer Behavior
Participants: 21 smokers (13M, ages 18-45) and 21 age-, gender-, race-, and education-matched controls. Procedure: Stimuli were 100 photographs: 50 food.
Punishing Unacceptable Behavior Janhavi Nilekani and Sarah Ong.
Inhibition of basic urges Self-presentation Maintaining relationships Behavior change Decision Making Self-control Ego-Strength DEPLETION Inter- personal.
UHCL Support Staff Association (SSA) and Professional and Administrative Staff Association (PASA) In consultation with Dr. Lisa M. Penney RAs: Lisa Sublett,
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Testing Hypotheses Tuesday, October 28. Objectives: Understand the logic of hypothesis testing and following related concepts Sidedness of a test (left-,
Please review this power point presentation after reading Chapter 1 in the text – you will have quiz questions that pertain to this material.
The Neural Basis of Economic Decision-making in the Ultimatum Game Jonathan D. Cohen lab, Princeton University Deborah Bird November 14, 2008.
Proposal Selection Form Proposer Identification Code __________________ Circle a proposal: 19/1 18/2 17/3 16/4 15/5 14/6 13/7 12/8 11/9 10/10 9/11 8/12.
Coalition Formation between Self-Interested Heterogeneous Actors Arlette van Wissen Bart Kamphorst Virginia DignumKobi Gal.
Team Formation between Heterogeneous Actors Arlette van Wissen Virginia Dignum Kobi Gal Bart Kamphorst.
Presented by Qian Zou.  The purpose of conducting the experiments.  The methodology for the experiments.  The Experimental Design : Cohesion Experiments.
Prediction in Human Presented by: Rezvan Kianifar January 2009.
Lecture 2 Economic Actors and Organizations: Motivation and Behavior.
Evolution of Control-Related Mental Models Crystal A. Brandon.
Management Skills Different management styles draw more on some skills than others. For instance, - What style might managers with good people skills.
Integrated Risk Management Charles Yoe, PhD Institute for Water Resources 2009.
Striving For Personal Wellness Making Healthy Choices and Decisions.
Copyright 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. PSYCHOLOGY: MAKING CONNECTIONS GREGORY J. FEIST ERIKA L. ROSENBERG.
MentalSocial Physical. Physical Health: the conditions of a person’s body. A proper diet, exercise, and the right amount of sleep are examples of keeping.
Chapter 50 The Prefrontal Cortex and Executive Brain Functions Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Cognition, Brain and Consciousness: An Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience Edited by Bernard J. Baars and Nicole M. Gage 2007 Academic Press Chapter.
THE FRONTAL LOBES ARE NECESSARY FOR ‘THEORY OF MIND’ Stass, Gallup, & Alexander (2001) Monica VuongPsychology 260|
Approaches to Problem Solving. There are many approaches to problem-solving. What follows in this PowerPoint are several that provide an opportunity for.
Buying and Selling Prices under Risk, Ambiguity and Conflict Michael Smithson The Australian National University Paul D. Campbell Australian Bureau of.
“The Role of the Human Prefrontal Cortex in Social Cognition and Moral Judgment” Group 3: Kindra Akridge, Antoinette Sellers, Hannah Stolarczyk, Tawni.
Emotional experience December 1, Emotional experience - introduction Subjective experience – not perception or expression ‘Qualia’ Consciousness.
PHYSIOLOGICAL UNDERPINNINGS OF LANGUAGE, PROBLEM SOLVING, AND REASONING.
The effects of working memory load on negative priming in an N-back task Ewald Neumann Brain-Inspired Cognitive Systems (BICS) July, 2010.
Biological Perspective Methodologies. Correlational Studies Psychologists often investigate the relationship between brain and behavior by examining what.
KEYS Scott Gajewski ART 389A Spring Contents Premise Getting Started -Players -Set-up -Materials Rules -Basics -Points System -Multiple Players.
Taking pride in cooperation Job van der Schalk,Tony Manstead Cardiff University, School of Psychology Martin Bruder University of Konstanz.
The Role of the Pre Frontal Cortex in Social Cognition Group 5 Alicia Iafonaro Alyona Koneva Barbara Kim Isaac Del Rio.
Module 1: Evolution and Economics An Analysis of You: Prisoner’s Dilemma.
RIGHT PARIETAL CORTEX PLAYS A CRITICAL ROLE IN CHANGE BLINDNESS by Naser Aljundi.
The effects of “personal control” and “social control” on delinquency Personal control denotes how the juvenile manages to resist using social unacceptable.
Theory of Mind and Executive Functioning: Dual Task Studies Claire Conway, Rebecca Bull & Louise Phillips School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen,
Better Health. No Hassles. Making Healthy Choices and Decisions Striving For Personal Wellness.
Understand sales processes and techniques to enhance customer relationships and to increase the likelihood of making sales.
Level 2 Business Studies AS90844 Demonstrate understanding of the internal operations of a large business.
Ratio Analysis…. Types of ratios…  Performance Ratios: Return on capital employed. (Income Statement and Balance Sheet) Gross profit margin (Income Statement)
Does the brain compute confidence estimates about decisions?
Are Executive Functions Affected by Slot Machine Speed of Play? The Impact of Reel Speed on Motor Response Inhibition Are Executive Functions Affected.
PRINCIPLES OF PERSUASION: MOTIVATING AGREEMENT International Negotiation Strategy: Theory and Practice Spring 2011 Professor Jasper Kim April 13, 2011.
Proposal Selection Form
CREATED BY T.ALAA AL AMOUDI
N. Bridges1, A. McKinley2, C. Walters2, M. Weisend3 ,C. Goodyear1
To Detect and Correct: Norm Violations and Their Enforcement
Volume 80, Issue 4, Pages (November 2013)
CREATED BY T.ALAA AL AMOUDI
Learning to Simulate Others' Decisions
Caleb E. Strait, Tommy C. Blanchard, Benjamin Y. Hayden  Neuron 
Wallis, JD Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute UC, Berkeley
Learning to Simulate Others' Decisions
Neural Signatures of Economic Preferences for Risk and Ambiguity
Chapter 31 Behavioral Economics
Volume 62, Issue 4, Pages (May 2009)
Economic Choice as an Untangling of Options into Actions
Volume 28, Issue 18, Pages e3 (September 2018)
PUBLIC POLICY, POWER AND DECISION
Presentation transcript:

Resisting the Power of Temptations The Right Prefrontal Cortex and Self-Control Knock, D. & Erst, F. (2007). Resisting the power of temptations: The right pre-frontal cortex and self-control. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1104: 123–134

Deciding not to succumb to all of our desires

The ability to override immediate urges is relevant for adaptive individual decision making AND contributes to harmonious social interactions 2 studies reveal the importance of inhibition in the process of decision making Claims that the capacity to resist temptation depends on the activity of the right PFC

Transcranial Repetitive Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) Brain stimulation technique that involves placing a small coil of wires on the scalp and applying a brief electric current to discrete brain areas via pulsed magnetic fields on the corresponding scalp location. Depending on the repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation frequency (rTMS), TMS may either excite the brain area or inhibit neural activity High Frequency rTMS : Excites cortical function Low Frequency rTMS : “virtual lesion” disruption of cortical function

Benefits of TMS Usage Studies involving patients with right sided lesions of the prefrontal cortex: Reveals that the resistance to the immediate self interests is often greatly diminished in people with PFC damage, particularly for patients with right sided lesions Limitations: Limited opportunity for experimental manipulations Possibility of functional reorganization after brain lesion may affect result interpretations Low number of patients

Benefits of TMS Usage Functional imaging studies Suggest that the right PFC may be specially important for self regulation and self control or behavioral adjustments Limitations Only passively measure brain activity with a specific task Do not reveal a causal relationship between changes in brain activity and their respective behavioral consequences Thus, A direct investigation of such a causal brain– behavior relationship would require a controlled manipulation of brain activity where the impact on behavior or cognition can be quantified.

Benefits of TMS Usage TMS technique allows for a controlled manipulation of brain activity where the impact on behavior or cognition can be quantified Application of this technique can be on healthy individuals, because it causes a transient change in cortical functioning Here, TMS was used to examine weather self control can be modified in healthy individuals in the context of both individual and social decision

Study 1 Individual Decision Making: Diminished Self- Control Leads to Increased Risk-Taking Behavior

“Virtual Lesion Study” Purpose: to investigate hemispheric asymmetries in risk taking behaviors Healthy volunteers Low frequency rTMS to the left or right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) Administered a risk task

Risk Task: Gambling Paradigm Provides a measure of risk taking Subjects have to decide between a relatively safe choice and a risky choice Safe choice provides a low reward with a higher probability Risky choice provides a higher reward with a lower probability

Risk Task: Gambling Paradigm Presented with 6 pink or blue boxes # of pink and blue boxes varied from trial to trial Asked to find the winning token behind one of the 6 boxes by selecting the color of the box they thought the winning token was behind

Risk Task: Gambling Paradigm Subjects were told that each box, regardless of color, was equally likely to hide the winning token Thus, the likelihood of finding the winning token was directly related to the ratio of blue to pink boxes

Risk Task: Gambling Paradigm Subjects are rewarded or penalized depending if they pick the correct color box or not Larger Reward/Penalty is associated with the high risk prospect (i.e. the color with the # of fewer boxes Smallest Reward/Penalty is associated with the low risk prospect

Risk Task: Gambling Paradigm Subjects are rewarded or penalized depending if they pick the correct color box or not Correct Choice – addition of number of points associated with that particular scenario Incorrect Choice- subtraction of the same amount of points

Risk Task: Gambling Paradigm Figure Above shows that the subject chose an incorrect choice that results in the subtraction of 90 points

Results Subjects stimulated over the right DLPFC were more likely to choose the high risk prospect than those stimulated over the left DLPFC or those who received the sham stimulation Thus, individuals display a significantly stronger preference for the risky prospect, choosing the larger potential reward even at risk of greater penalty, following the disruption of the right, but not left, DLPFC

Possible Alternative Explanations of rTMS Effect Task requires subjects to measure the ratio of the pink and blue boxes and take into account the expected value of the 2 options It may be that subjects receiving right prefrontal rTMS are impaired at calculating the riskiness of the choices AND/OR May be impaired at integrating information about the consequences of different choices

Study 2 Social Decision Making: Diminished Self-Control Leads to Selfish Behavior The human species in unique to the extent that social norms that constrain the unrestricted pursuit of self interest govern behavior Overcoming the self’s natural, impulsive nature requires self-control

The Ultimatum Game (UG) Provides a useful tool for studying the neural mechanisms of self control in the context of social decision making Illustrates the tension between: economic self-interest and fairness goals

The Ultimatum Game (UG) A bargaining game 2 anonymous individuals, a proposer and a responder, must agree on the division of a given amount of money. Proposer  can make 1 suggestion to the responder on how the given amount of money is split between them by making him an offer Responder  Accept : each player keeps the amount of money the proposer allocates Reject : neither player receives any money

Conflict within the Responder to LOW offers Tension between economic self-interest and fairness goals Economic self interest drives responder = acceptance of low offers Fairness goals drive responder = feels the need to reject

Previous Research Strong evidence for rejecting low offers if the stake is as high as 3 months’ income Rejection rates up to 80% for offers below 25% of the available money

Previous Research: Neuroimaging study Anterior insula and DLPFC are activated when responders decide whether to accept or reject an unfair offer

Previous Research: Neuroimaging study Anterior insula – involved in the evaluation and representation of negative emotional states

Previous Research: Neuroimaging study Right and left DLPFC More strongly activated when subjects face unfair offers Areas thought to be involved in: Executive control Goal maintenance Inhibition of proponent responses All these functions of relevant to the Responder Because of the competing goals: fairness goals and self interest Which should be maintained, or given priority? Which motivational impulse should be restrained?

Current study Understanding if the DLPFC is crucial for the responders’ decisions Sample: 17 subjects – low frequency rTMS to right DLPFC 17 subjects – low frequency rTMS to left DLPFC 17 subjects- sham (control group) Stake Size = CHF 20 (CHF 1 ~ $0.80) Proposer offer strategy: 10, 8, 6, or 4 10 is fairest offer, 4 is most unfair offer

Current study If DLPFC is involved in overriding selfish impulses that drive a subject toward acceptance of unfair offers, low-frequency to this brain region should INCREASE the acceptance rate of unfair offers relative to the sham stimulation condition. Focus on acceptance behavior of the most unfair offer of 4, because the tension between fairness and self interest is greatest

RESULTS

Results Results suggest that who received right prefrontal TMS are less able to resist the economic temptation to accept unfair offers Thus, right DLPFC is involved in overriding self interest motives

Interpretation of Results Right DLPFC is causally involved in a network that modulates the relative impact of fairness motives and self-interest goals on decision making Indication that the capacity for restraint depends on the activity level of the right PFC In response override, one must stop a prepotent response to a stimulus because : response must me withheld, or a less prepotent response it more appropriate Thus, displaying self-control and not being slaves of our emotional impulses, temptations and desires. This allows us to be more socially adequate