Literature DB >> 34988911

To Blame or Not? Modulating Third-Party Punishment with the Framing Effect.

Jiamiao Yang1,2, Ruolei Gu3,4, Jie Liu2, Kexin Deng1, Xiaoxuan Huang1, Yue-Jia Luo4,5, Fang Cui6,7.   

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.
© 2022. Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Framing effect; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Insula; Mid-cingulate cortex; Third-party punishment

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 34988911      PMCID: PMC9106775          DOI: 10.1007/s12264-021-00808-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosci Bull        ISSN: 1995-8218            Impact factor:   5.271


  60 in total

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Review 9.  The feeling of anger: From brain networks to linguistic expressions.

Authors:  Nelly Alia-Klein; Gabriela Gan; Gadi Gilam; Jessica Bezek; Antonio Bruno; Thomas F Denson; Talma Hendler; Leroy Lowe; Veronica Mariotti; Maria R Muscatello; Sara Palumbo; Silvia Pellegrini; Pietro Pietrini; Amelia Rizzo; Edelyn Verona
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10.  Neural substrates of context- and person-dependent altruistic punishment.

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