Self-serving impulses and moral considerations often act as two opposing
forces that govern our everyday behavior. But how does the brain decide
which one wins?



As a step toward answering that questions, Ernst Fehr of the University
of Zurich <http://www.unizh.ch/index_en.html%20>   and his colleagues
watched as 52 volunteers played the ultimatum game, an anonymous
exchange in which an individual decides whether to punish a
partner's behavior at his or her own cost. In this version of the
game, one player proposes how to divide 20 Swiss francs with the second
player. If the responder accepts, the first flayer gets the money
demanded and the responder gets the rest. But if the responder rejects a
lopsided offer, neither gets anything. "In this game, players must
overcome selfish impulses if they want to punish their partners for an
unfair offer," Fehr explains.

To test how the brain regulates the control of these impulses, the
researchers disrupted the activity of the right or left dorsolateral
prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), a brain region known to be involved in
self-control. Using repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, a
technique that delivers short magnetic pulses that penetrate the skull
and temporarily disrupt neural firing, the team inhibited the DLPFC in
36 responders while they were making their decision. The remaining 16
players served as a control group.

The researchers found that turning off the right side of the DLPFC made
the volunteers much more likely to accept highly uneven splits, even
thought they still judged these offers as unfair. "That suggests
that right DLPFC activity is crucial when it comes to the ability to
override selfish impulses," says Fehr, adding that dysfunctions of
this brain region may cause certain mental disorders characterized by
excessive selfishness.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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