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Elucidating the role of the posterior medial frontal cortex in social conflict processing

Elucidating the role of the posterior medial frontal cortex in social conflict processing
Elucidating the role of the posterior medial frontal cortex in social conflict processing
A fundamental function of the brain is learning via new information. Studies investigating the neural basis of information-based learning processes indicate an important role played by the posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC) in representing conflict between an individual's expectation and new information. However, specific function of the pMFC in this process remains relatively indistinct. Particularly, it’s unclear whether the pMFC plays a role in the detection of conflict of incoming information, or the update of their belief after new information is provided. In an fMRI scanner, twenty-eight Japanese students viewed scenarios depicting various pro-social/anti-social behaviors. Participants rated how likely Japanese and South Korean students would perform each behavior, followed by feedback of the actual likelihood. They were then asked to rerate the scenarios after the fMRI session. Participants updated their second estimates based on feedback, with estimate changes more pronounced for favorable feedback (e.g., higher likelihood of pro-social behavior than expected) despite nationality, indicating participants were willing to view other people favorably. The fMRI results demonstrated activity in a part of the pMFC, the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC), was correlated with social conflict (difference between participant's estimate and actual likelihood), but not the corresponding belief update. Importantly, activity in a different part within the dmPFC was more sensitive to unfavorable trials compared to favorable trials. These results indicate sensitivity in the pMFC (at least within the dmPFC) relates to conflict between desirable outcomes versus reality, as opposed to the associated update of belief.
0028-3932
Wake, Stephanie
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Aoki, Ryuta
e2f8e8e0-47fc-4ca9-b953-747ed42eff05
Nakahara, Kiyoshi
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Izuma, Keise
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Wake, Stephanie
dedd24ad-6791-4db4-800c-ae19e3d9cf01
Aoki, Ryuta
e2f8e8e0-47fc-4ca9-b953-747ed42eff05
Nakahara, Kiyoshi
b3257d30-6368-464c-8da6-652ac526b14c
Izuma, Keise
67894464-b2eb-4834-9727-c2a870587e5a

Wake, Stephanie, Aoki, Ryuta, Nakahara, Kiyoshi and Izuma, Keise (2019) Elucidating the role of the posterior medial frontal cortex in social conflict processing. Neuropsychologia, 132, [107124]. (doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2019.107124).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A fundamental function of the brain is learning via new information. Studies investigating the neural basis of information-based learning processes indicate an important role played by the posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC) in representing conflict between an individual's expectation and new information. However, specific function of the pMFC in this process remains relatively indistinct. Particularly, it’s unclear whether the pMFC plays a role in the detection of conflict of incoming information, or the update of their belief after new information is provided. In an fMRI scanner, twenty-eight Japanese students viewed scenarios depicting various pro-social/anti-social behaviors. Participants rated how likely Japanese and South Korean students would perform each behavior, followed by feedback of the actual likelihood. They were then asked to rerate the scenarios after the fMRI session. Participants updated their second estimates based on feedback, with estimate changes more pronounced for favorable feedback (e.g., higher likelihood of pro-social behavior than expected) despite nationality, indicating participants were willing to view other people favorably. The fMRI results demonstrated activity in a part of the pMFC, the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC), was correlated with social conflict (difference between participant's estimate and actual likelihood), but not the corresponding belief update. Importantly, activity in a different part within the dmPFC was more sensitive to unfavorable trials compared to favorable trials. These results indicate sensitivity in the pMFC (at least within the dmPFC) relates to conflict between desirable outcomes versus reality, as opposed to the associated update of belief.

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Accepted/In Press date: 13 June 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 June 2019
Published date: September 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 432552
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432552
ISSN: 0028-3932
PURE UUID: 555c8c57-3d85-407e-aeb3-85457da84776

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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 08:01

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Contributors

Author: Stephanie Wake
Author: Ryuta Aoki
Author: Kiyoshi Nakahara
Author: Keise Izuma

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