When “more for others, less for self” leads to co-benefits: A tri-MRI dyad-hyperscanning study

研究成果: Article同行評審

1 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

Unselfishness is admired, especially when collaborations between groups of various scales are urgently needed. However, its neural mechanisms remain elusive. In a tri-MRI dyad-hyperscanning experiment involving 26 groups, each containing 4 participants as two rotating pairs in a coordination game, we sought to achieve reciprocity, or “winning in turn by the two interacting players,” as the precursor to unselfishness. Due to its critical role in social processing, the right temporal–parietal junction (rTPJ) was the seed for both time domain (connectivity) and frequency domain (i.e., coherence) analyses. For the former, negative connectivity between the rTPJ and the mentalizing network areas (e.g., the right inferior parietal lobule, rIPL) was identified, and such connectivity was further negatively correlated with the individual's final gain, supporting our task design that “rewarded” the reciprocal participants. For the latter, cerebral coherences of the rTPJs emerged between the interacting pairs (i.e., within-group interacting pairs), and the coupling between the rTPJ and the right superior temporal gyrus (rSTG) between the players who were not interacting with each other (i.e., within-group noninteracting pairs). These coherences reinforce the hypotheses that the rTPJ–rTPJ coupling tracks the collaboration processes and the rTPJ–rSTG coupling for the emergence of decontextualized shared meaning. Our results underpin two social roles (inferring others’ behavior and interpreting social outcomes) subserved by the rTPJ-related network and highlight its interaction with other-self/other-concerning brain areas in reaching co-benefits among unselfish players.

原文English
文章編號e14560
期刊Psychophysiology
61
發行號7
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 2024 7月

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • 神經心理學與生理心理學
  • 生理學
  • 實驗與認知心理學
  • 生理學(醫學)

指紋

深入研究「When “more for others, less for self” leads to co-benefits: A tri-MRI dyad-hyperscanning study」主題。共同形成了獨特的指紋。

引用此