| Literature DB >> 30108251 |
Isabel Catarina Duarte1,2, Sónia Brito-Costa2,3, Ricardo Cayolla4,5, Miguel Castelo-Branco6,7.
Abstract
The neural basis of dilemmas involving decisions with profound affective impact, such as in romantic life, remains to be understood. The "Battle of the Sexes" is a paradigm from Game Theory that can be used to experimentally address such dilemmas. A form of in-group love, tribal love in football fans, provides the opportunity to study strong affective dilemmas when tribal and romantic love compete for hedonic decision-making. Here, we used for the first time a "Battle of the Sexes" dilemma using fMRI. We investigated, in 44 male football fans, the neural correlates of cooperative behaviour under conflicting choices in the context of romantic versus tribal love. We identified a critical functional segregation of prefrontal regions in affective decision-making. The orbitofrontal cortex signalled emotional appraisal of the dilemma. The medial anterolateral and the ventromedial prefrontal cortices reflected reciprocal cooperation instead of selfish engagement in football-related activities. The lateral portion of anterolateral prefrontal cortex was recruited during ultimate deliberation. In sum, emotional appraisal and rational choice reflected a contiguous functional parcellation in anterolateral prefrontal cortex: appraisal (medial) vs. choice (lateral region).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30108251 PMCID: PMC6092421 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-30611-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Illustration of a payoff matrix of a Battle of the sexes dilemma. The presented values are examples of what could be the answers on the 7-point Likert questionnaires concerning choice of activities. Note that one may prefer (and thereby score higher) an activity with the partner rather than doing it alone. Similarly, one can score to engage on the activity suggested by the partner higher than to go for his/her own option alone. Each quadrant in the payoff matrix corresponds to an option in the decision phase of the dilemma (O1-O4). The participant faced the four choice options, but was not directly exposed to the matrix values (which were extracted from personalized questionnaires and were used for further analysis). Here, option 4 (O4) would be the option corresponding to the highest joint payoff for the couple.
Figure 2Contrast ‘appraisal’ vs. ‘choice’ (RFX, 44 participants, t(43) = 3.38, p < 0.01 FDR corrected). Time courses of BOLD signal changes are plotted for selected regions of interest.
Figure 3Contrast higher vs. lower cooperation during the ‘appraisal’ phase (RFX, n = 33, t(32) = 2.04, p < 0.05, minimum cluster extent 60).
Figure 4Summary: Clusters in the orbitofrontal and ventromedial PFC (A) and clusters in the anterolateral prefrontal cortex (B) identified at group-level in RFX analysis of various contrasts (see colour labels for each specific type of contrast in the insets).