| Literature DB >> 31312469 |
Nafees Hamid1,2, Clara Pretus1,3, Scott Atran1,4,5,6, Molly J Crockett7, Jeremy Ginges1,8, Hammad Sheikh1,8, Adolf Tobeña1,3, Susanna Carmona9,10, Angel Gómez1,11, Richard Davis1,4,12, Oscar Vilarroya1,3,13.
Abstract
Violent intergroup conflicts are often motivated by commitments to abstract ideals such as god or nation, so-called 'sacred' values that are insensitive to material trade-offs. There is scant knowledge of how the brain processes costly sacrifices for such cherished causes. We studied willingness to fight and die for sacred values using fMRI in Barcelona, Spain, among supporters of a radical Islamist group. We measured brain activity in radicalized individuals as they indicated their willingness to fight and die for sacred and non-sacred values, and as they reacted to peers' ratings for the same values. We observed diminished activity in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), inferior frontal gyrus, and parietal cortex while conveying willingness to fight and die for sacred relative to non-sacred values-regions that have previously been implicated in calculating costs and consequences. An overlapping region of the dlPFC was active when viewing conflicting ratings of sacred values from peers, to the extent participants were sensitive to peer influence, suggesting that it is possible to induce flexibility in the way people defend sacred values. Our results cohere with a view that 'devoted actors' motivated by an extreme commitment towards sacred values rely on distinctive neurocognitve processes that can be identified.Entities:
Keywords: fMRI; neuroimaging; radicalization; sacred values; violent extremism; will to fight
Year: 2019 PMID: 31312469 PMCID: PMC6599782 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.181585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Figure 1.Scheme of the overall testing timeline including trial structure in Rating 1 and Feedback sessions. Trials are exemplified with a screenshot of one of the items presented in the Urdu version (‘Prophet Mohammed must never be caricatured’) with a Likert scale (‘Not at all willing to fight and die’ to ‘Extremely willing’). Rating 1 trials began with the cursor centred in 4 (marked in green), which participants moved along the Likert scale to convey their rating. Feedback trials began with previous participants' ratings on the same item (framed in green), and community feedback (framed in red) was presented following button press. After Rating and Feedback sessions, a behavioural test session including Rating 2 and the emotions questionnaire was completed outside the fMRI scanner.
Figure 2.Neural signatures with willingness to fight and die for sacred values. (a) Activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and the superior parietal cortex was decreased during sacred compared with non-sacred value assessment (T = 3.40, p < 0.05 FWEc, single voxel p < 0.001). The colour bar represents t-values. (b) Parameter estimates of the clusters of activation in the dlPFC, dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC), IFG and parietal lobule (binary masks extracted from the non-sacred values greater than sacred values contrast) were negative and significantly lower for the sacred values greater than baseline contrast compared with the non-sacred values greater than baseline contrast (marked with *, dlPFC: Wilk's lambda = 0.7951, F1,28 = 7.21, p < 0.012; dmPFC: Wilk's lambda = 0.661, F1,28 = 14.33, p < 0.001; IFG: Wilk's lambda = 0.7951, F1,28 = 7.21, p < 0.012). (c) During ratings, vmPFC showed a positive parametric response to willingness to fight and die for sacred values (small volume correction, T = 3.40, p < 0.05 FWEc, single voxel p < 0.001, in red).
Figure 3.Effects of lower willingness to fight and die community ratings (peers-lower) on participants' ratings and self-reported emotions. (a) Right dlPFC activity predicted by change in willingness to fight and die for sacred values overlapped with R dlPFC activity associated with non-sacred value versus sacred value during the willingness to fight and die rating paradigm (small volume correction using R dlPFC mask from non-sacred versus sacred value contrast, T = 3.42, p < 0.05 FWEc, single voxel p < 0.001). The colour bar represents t-values. (b) Significant interaction between feedback type and pre/post-manipulation ratings in willingness to fight and die indicating a change in judgement in alignment with peers (p < 0.008). (c) Sacred values elicited the greater degrees of emotion compared with non-sacred values, with higher reported moral outrage at conflicting feedback (left, p < 0.001) and higher joy at non-conflicting feedback (right, p < 0.002). (*) indicates significant results.