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1.
Neuroscience Bulletin ; (6): 328-342, 2023.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-971568

ABSTRACT

From birth to adulthood, we often align our behaviors, attitudes, and opinions with a majority, a phenomenon known as social conformity. A seminal framework has proposed that conformity behaviors are mainly driven by three fundamental motives: a desire to gain more information to be accurate, to obtain social approval from others, and to maintain a favorable self-concept. Despite extensive interest in neuroimaging investigation of social conformity, the relationship between brain systems and these fundamental motivations has yet to be established. Here, we reviewed brain imaging findings of social conformity with a componential framework, aiming to reveal the neuropsychological substrates underlying different conformity motivations. First, information-seeking engages the evaluation of social information, information integration, and modification of task-related activity, corresponding to brain networks implicated in reward, cognitive control, and tasks at hand. Second, social acceptance involves the anticipation of social acceptance or rejection and mental state attribution, mediated by networks of reward, punishment, and mentalizing. Third, self-enhancement entails the excessive representation of positive self-related information and suppression of negative self-related information, ingroup favoritism and/or outgroup derogation, and elaborated mentalizing processes to the ingroup, supported by brain systems of reward, punishment, and mentalizing. Therefore, recent brain imaging studies have provided important insights into the fundamental motivations of social conformity in terms of component processes and brain mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Humans , Social Conformity , Motivation , Brain , Social Behavior , Brain Mapping
2.
Neuroscience Bulletin ; (6): 533-547, 2022.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-929102

ABSTRACT

People as third-party observers, without direct self-interest, may punish norm violators to maintain social norms. However, third-party judgment and the follow-up punishment might be susceptible to the way we frame (i.e., verbally describe) a norm violation. We conducted a behavioral and a neuroimaging experiment to investigate the above phenomenon, which we call the "third-party framing effect". In these experiments, participants observed an anonymous perpetrator deciding whether to keep her/his economic benefit while exposing a victim to a risk of physical pain (described as "harming others" in one condition and "not helping others" in the other condition), then they had a chance to punish that perpetrator at their own cost. Our results showed that the participants were more willing to execute third-party punishment under the harm frame compared to the help frame, manifesting a framing effect. Self-reported anger toward perpetrators mediated the relationship between empathy toward victims and the framing effect. Meanwhile, activation of the insula mediated the relationship between mid-cingulate cortex activation and the framing effect; the functional connectivity between these regions significantly predicted the size of the framing effect. These findings shed light on the psychological and neural mechanisms of the third-party framing effect.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Empathy , Gyrus Cinguli , Neuroimaging , Pain , Punishment/psychology
3.
Chinese Journal of Plastic Surgery ; (6): 151-152, 2008.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-325883

ABSTRACT

<p><b>OBJECTIVE</b>To explore the satisfactory rate in patients with body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) after cosmetic surgery.</p><p><b>METHODS</b>We designed a questionnaire to investigate the postoperative satisfactory rate in patients with BDD and without BDD.</p><p><b>RESULTS</b>There was significant difference in postoperative satisfactory rate between patients with BDD and without BDD.</p><p><b>CONCLUSION</b>The patients with BDD have a lower satisfactory rate, which is even worse after repeated surgery.</p>


Subject(s)
Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Body Dysmorphic Disorders , Psychology , Body Image , Patient Satisfaction , Surgery, Plastic , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
Chinese Journal of Geriatrics ; (12)2001.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-675948

ABSTRACT

Objective To investigate the brain mechanisms of aging of the visual attention. Methods Through the precue-target visual search paradigm using the event-related potentials technique,16 young and 16 elderly subjects participated the electrophysiological experiment.The background was comprised of three homocentric black circles and eight English capital letters consisted of each circle.The letter “T” was designed as the target stimulus.T was a target only when it located the circle clued to the same size of the precue.For example,when the cue was the “large”,“T” may appear within 3 circles.When the cue was the “median”,“T” may appear within either the median or small circles.When the cue was small,the target “T” may appear only within the small circle. Results The reaction time of the two groups of subjects became quick with the reduction of the cue scale,while the amplitudes of P1 and N1 components of event-related potentials increased with the decrease of the cue scale.Old subjects showed longer response time than did young subjects,and the posterior P1 component was enhanced significantly and N1 component was inhibited obviously.The P2 component was manifested as significantly inhibitory effect not only in the amplitude but also in the abnormal and unstable waveform.Conclusions The cognitive function of elderly subjects declines in the research of target stimuli,which suggests that the age-related changes could lead to deficit in the posterior area of the brain to visual spatial attention (involuntary attention).

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