| Literature DB >> 25147517 |
Isabella M Kopton1, Peter Kenning2.
Abstract
Over the last decade, the application of neuroscience to economic research has gained in importance and the number of neuroeconomic studies has grown extensively. The most common method for these investigations is fMRI. However, fMRI has limitations (particularly concerning situational factors) that should be countered with other methods. This review elaborates on the use of functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) as a new and promising tool for investigating economic decision making both in field experiments and outside the laboratory. We describe results of studies investigating the reliability of prototype NIRS studies, as well as detailing experiments using conventional and stationary fNIRS devices to analyze this potential. This review article shows that further research using mobile fNIRS for studies on economic decision making outside the laboratory could be a fruitful avenue helping to develop the potential of a new method for field experiments outside the laboratory.Entities:
Keywords: decision making; mobile fNIRS; neuroeconomics; prefrontal cortex; real-world setting
Year: 2014 PMID: 25147517 PMCID: PMC4124877 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.473
Figure 1Change in light attenuation.
Figure 2Literature review: stationary vs. mobile NIRS studies with emphasis on general vs. economic decision making.
Stationary NIRS studies with emphasis on general decision making.
| Köchel et al., | Pu et al., | Tsujii and Watanabe, | Moser et al., |
| Content: Perception of pictures and imagery Transferable to: Transferable to product and promotion policy; e.g., influence of visual stimuli on advertising and (innovative) products (e.g., Schäfer et al., | Content: Relationship between prefrontal function during a cognitive task and social functioning (motivation factor scores of SASS) Transferable to: Transferable to leadership and personal management research (e.g., investigating working behavior for practical implications; see Kenning and Kopton, | Content: Time pressure effect and the activity in the inferior frontal cortex (IFC) Transferable to: Managers' strategic decision making under time pressure, as well as consumer decision making under time pressure | Content: Results show that ADHD can be characterized by impairment of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex Transferable to: Investigating studies of consumers' pathological decision making, such as research about compulsive buying (e.g., Manolis and Roberts, |
| Plichta et al., | Schneider et al., | Ernst et al., | Gehricke et al., |
| Content: Auditory cortex activation is modulated by emotion Transferable to: Transferable to promotion policy and POS-marketing (influence of, for example, music or voice on consumers' decision making; subliminal marketing) | Content: Emotion discrimination task with faceless avatars expressing different patterns (fearful, happy, sad, neutral, angry) and participants' judgment Transferable to: Transferable to managers' interpersonal exchange processes; human resource management with relation to the motivation of employees; interpersonal behavior in the online world (information systems research; e.g., Riedl et al., | Content: Cortical processes during automatic and regulated approach-avoidance reactions Transferable to: Findings for approach-avoidance theories are transferable to real-world economic decision making of consumers and managers; from a consumer perspective, testing of First Choice Brand Effect (Deppe et al., | Content: Investigation of how cigarette smoking affects prefrontal brain hemodynamics in smokers with and without ADHD Transferable to: Transferable to prior studies about consumers' pathological decision making (e.g., Otero-Lopez and Pol, |
Studies with mobile NIRS devices.
| Bozkurt et al., | New-born brain metabolism | Validity of the system | Relatively high external validity | 1 (new-born) and prior phantom tests | NIRS prototype of a low-cost, battery-operated, dual wavelength, continuous wave | Shot-limited SNR of 67 dB for 10 Hz temporal resolution was achieved. Reliable clinical tool employed at bedside |
| Muehlemann et al., | Tissue oxygenation and cortical hemodynamic response to sensory stimuli | Wireless NIRI device tested in a solid silicone phantom and an | Very low external validity | 1 phantom test and 1 male ( | Tests with lightweight and inexpensive miniaturized wireless NIRI device show that the measurement accuracy is comparable to well-established instruments | |
| Atsumori et al., | Pre-frontal cortex while subject performed a word-fluency task | Functional wearable NIRS brain imaging with a prototype during reading | High external validity (but computer task) | 1 (adult) | During the task periods, the subject was asked to think of as many words as possible that begin with the Japanese character | Typical changes in oxy-Hb and deoxy-Hb during the task. Therefore, prototype can be used to investigate functions in the prefrontal cortex |
| Yoshino et al., | Frontal lobe activations during car acceleration and deceleration | Functional wireless multi-channel system (FOIRE-3000, Shimadzu); 16 sources and 16 detection probes | Very high external validity (field experiment under specific driving conditions) | 12 (adults) | Acceleration and deceleration | Results show that vehicle deceleration requires more brain activation, focused in the prefrontal cortex, than does acceleration |
| Yoshino et al., | Activation in the frontal lobe during driving operations | Functional wireless multi-channel system (FOIRE-3000, Shimadzu); 16 sources and 16 detection probes | Very high external validity (field experiment under specific driving conditions) | 12 (adults) | Resting state, acceleration, deceleration, U-turn, stop | Powerful technique for investigating brain activations outdoors, proving to be sufficiently robust for use in an actual highway driving experiment in the field of intelligent transport systems |
| Piper et al., | Motor cortex activity during bicycling (left hand gripping) | Functional wireless and mobile NIRS brain imaging during an outdoor activity | Very high external validity (field experiment with specific task conditions) | 8 (adults) | Three different exercise conditions: (1) during outdoor bicycle riding; (2) while pedaling on a stationary exercise bicycle; (3) sitting still on a stationary exercise bicycle | Following left hand gripping, a significant decrease in the deoxy-hemoglobin concentration over the contralateral motor cortex could be found for all three conditions; outdoor and indoor conditions showed no significant difference in the shape or amplitude of HbR. |
| Holper et al., | Simultaneous comparison with EDA; activity of lateral prefrontal cortex during risky decisions | Functional wireless and mobile NIRS brain imaging NIRS machinery with only one light-source | Relatively high external validity (but computer task) | 20 (adults) | Risky decision-making task (Christopoulos et al., | Enhanced activation in the lateral prefrontal cortex is related to high-risk decisions; reduced activation in this area is related to low-risk decisions. EDA revealed increasing responses for high-risk decisions |
Potential of fNIRS for neuroeconomics.
Figure 3Potential field experiment set-up. (A) Exemplary set-up with mobile fNIRS, eye tracking and EDA devide; (B) Optode positioning of prefrontal measuring cap specifically developed by NIRx Medizintechnik GmbH, Germany.