Anger, Rationality and Neuroeconomics
Daniel John Zizzo

ABSTRACT

This paper employs neurobehavioral and psychological evidence to argue
that anger is an emotion arising from significant cognitive processing,
one that, in relation to economic decision-making, may be subtly mediated
by many factors (including intentions). Anger is an emotion implying a
higher likelihood of a behavioral response directed against the object of
anger. The medial and possibly other prefrontal cortex regions play an
important role in anger processing, whereas the amygdala does not. Any
eventual difficulty for rational choice may come more from the difficulty
of understanding the cognitive underpinnings of anger than from
understanding the emotional process itself.

December, 2003

JEL Classification Numbers: C91, D11.

Keywords: Anger, Emotions, Neuroeconomics, Rationality.

Full Paper: http://www.econ.ox.ac.uk/Research/wp/pdf/paper182.pdf

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