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Brain Experts Now Follow the Money

June 17, 2003
By SANDRA BLAKESLEE 




 




People are efficient, rational beings who tirelessly act in
their own self-interest. They make financial decisions
based on reason, not emotion. And naturally, most save
money for that proverbial rainy day. 

Right? 

Well, no. In making financial decisions, people are
regularly influenced by gut feelings and intuitions. They
cooperate with total strangers, gamble away the family
paycheck and squander their savings on investments touted
by known liars. 

Such human frailties may seem far too complicated and
unpredictable to fold into economic equations. But now many
neuroscientists are beginning to argue that it is time to
create a new field of study, called neuroeconomics. 

These researchers are busy scanning the brains of people as
they make economic decisions, barter, compete, cooperate,
defect, punish, engage in auctions, gamble and calculate
their next economic moves. Based on their understanding of
how fluctuations in neurons and brain chemicals drive those
behaviors, the neuroscientists are expressing their
findings in differential equations and other mathematical
language beloved by economists. 

"This new approach, which I consider a revolution, should
provide a theory of how people decide in economic and
strategic situations," said Dr. Aldo Rustichini, an
economics professor at the University of Minnesota. "So
far, the decision process has been for economists a black
box." 

Dr. Jonathan D. Cohen, a professor of cognitive
neuroscience at Princeton, agreed. "Most economists don't
base their theories on people's actual behavior," he said.
"They study idealized versions of human behavior, which
they assume is optimal in achieving gains." 

To explore economic decision making, researchers are
scanning the brains of people as they engage in a variety
of games designed by experimental economists. The exercises
are intended to make people anticipate what others will do
or what others will infer from the person's own actions. 

The games also reveal some fundamental facts about the
brain that economists are just beginning to learn and
appreciate: 

�In making short-term predictions, neural systems tap into
gut feelings and emotions, comparing what we know from the
past with what is happening right now. 

�The brain needs a way to compare and evaluate objects,
people, events, memories, internal states and the perceived
needs of others so that it can make choices. It does so by
assigning relative value to everything that happens. But
instead of dollars and cents, the brain relies on the
firing rates of a number of neurotransmitters - the
chemicals, like dopamine, that transmit nerve impulses.
Novelty, money, cocaine, a delicious meal and a beautiful
face all activate dopamine circuits to varying degrees;
exactly how much dopamine an individual generates in
response to a particular reward is calibrated by past
experience and by one's own biological makeup. 

�Specific brain circuits monitor how people weigh different
sources of rewards or punishments and how they allocate
their attention. A region called the anterior cingulate
reacts when people make mistakes or perform poorly; some
neuroscientists say it also registers gains and losses,
financial and otherwise. A small structure called the
insula detects sensations in the body. It is also involved
in assessing whether to trust someone offering to sell us
the Brooklyn Bridge. 

These structures and neurotransmitter systems are activated
before a person is conscious of having made a decision, Dr.
Cohen said. 

In a study published the current issue of the journal
Science, Dr. Cohen and his colleagues, including Dr. Alan
G. Sanfey of Princeton, took images of people's brains as
they played the ultimatum game, a test of fairness between
two people. 

In the ultimatum game, the first player is given, say, $10
in cash. He must then decide how much to give to a second
player. It could be $5, the fairest offer, or a lesser
amount depending on what he thinks he can get away with. If
Player 2 accepts the offer, the money is shared
accordingly. But if he rejects it, both players go away
empty-handed. It is a one-shot game, and the players never
meet again. 

Most people in the shoes of Player 2 refuse to take amounts
under $2 or $3, Dr. Cohen said. They would rather punish
the first player than feel cheated. "But this makes no
economic sense," he said. "You're better off with something
than nothing." 

Brain images showed that when players accepted an offer
they viewed as fair enough, a circuit in the front of their
brains that supports deliberative thinking was activated. 

But when they rejected an offer, the insula - which
monitors bodily states, including disgust - overrode the
frontal circuit. The more strongly the insula fired, the
more rapidly the person rejected the offer, Dr. Cohen said.
Moreover, the insula fired well before the person pushed
the button to refuse an offer. 

Economists can use this finding to quantify the
contribution of emotion and deliberation in making
decisions, Dr. Cohen said. It is possible to calculate how
much emotion goes into evaluating the worth of economic
activities and to study the neural underpinnings of
bargaining when people don't want to let others take
advantage of them. 

Dr. P. Read Montague, a neuroscientist at Baylor University
in Houston, is using gambling tasks to identify individual
differences in willingness to take monetary risks. Bullish
investors have different patterns of dopamine release
compared with bearish investors, he said. And in a game of
mutual trust, women's brains show a big dopamine or reward
response when they are trusted by others; there is no such
response in men's brains. 

At other universities, neuroscientists are exploring brain
activity aroused in various economic games. In the
prisoner's dilemma, which tests a person's willingness to
cooperate or defect, players show a particular pattern of
neural firing before they betray another player.
Cooperation is captured in dopamine flows. Similarly, it is
possible to trace circuits activated when people anticipate
making or losing money, decide to trust a stranger or
punish freeloaders in a game of sharing public goods. 

The brain is particularly responsive to unexpected or
unpredictable rewards, said Dr. Gregory Berns, a
neuroscientist at Emory University in Atlanta. When
uncertainty is high, as in gambling situations, the brain
can get high on dopamine and even become addicted to it. 

Expectations alter economic experience. It feels better to
get nothing when you expect $10 compared to getting nothing
when you expect $90, researchers say. 

Dr. Montague says the brain seizes on patterns and deludes
itself into thinking that short sequences predict long
ones. For example, after flipping three tails in a row,
many people expect the next toss to be heads. By contrast,
if a stock does well two quarters in a row, they expect it
to continue doing well. Such intuitions lead people to
adopt a false sense of confidence and tolerate losses for
longer than they should, he said. 

Neuroscience may shed light on all sorts of economic
behavior, said Dr. George Loewenstein, an economist at
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. "Under the
influence of powerful emotions or drives, people often end
up doing the opposite of what they think is best for
themselves, even at the moment of acting," he said. 

For example, many people will choose a small reward that
arrives soon as opposed to a larger reward that arrives
later. The future is uncertain. Why wait? 

For now, neuroeconomic experiments tell more about
individuals and small groups than about markets and
economies, said Dr. Colin Camerer, an economics professor
at the California Institute of Technology and author of a
new book, "Behavioral Game Theory." 

But plans are afoot to study the brains of many people in
scanners linked by the Internet as they play economic
games, Dr. Camerer said. The stock market is a reflection
of decisions being made by millions of brains. Eventually
it should be possible to study groups of brains to unravel
mysteries about the formation of market bubbles and why
they break. Or why people continue to spend money when the
stock market falls. Or whether tax cuts will have a bearing
on what people do. 

"Your dopamine system plays off my dopamine system," Dr.
Montague said. "You buy, I buy, I worry about you, our
systems become entrained. You sell, I sell and so on. It
may be possible to get to the bottom of this behavior." 


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/17/science/17NEUR.html?ex=1056857945&ei=1&en=1df3de6529c35779


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