The psychological and neurobiological determinants of social behavior Assessing the affective, cognitive, and neural processes underlying trust and mentalizing
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| Award date | 06-03-2024 |
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| Number of pages | 188 |
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| Abstract |
Much remains unknown about the specific affective, cognitive, and neural mechanisms involved that support our social behavior. The gap is addressed in my doctoral research in two ways: 1) by investigating the relationship between integral affect and social economic decisions and 2) by delineating how incidental affect impacts the neural signature of mentalizing. We first conduct a literature review and meta-analysis to inform the current debate concerning the determinants of trust. Our critical review shows that many experimental paradigms fall short of identifying clear affective mechanisms involved in trust. Therefore, we developed a novel experimental approach that relate the affective and cognitive reactions to betrayal to participants’ decision in the trust game and the dictator game. The results show that betrayal is positively and specifically associated with trust. Moreover, the perception of how socially distant we are from our interaction partners is significantly associated with trust. To assess the influence of incidental affect on the mentalizing network, we conducted an fMRI experiment using a novel false-belief task. The results revealed that activity in bilateral TPJ and IFG reflect false belief processing, and, at the same time as confirmed by conjunction analysis, suppressed by anxiety. During belief inferences threat specifically suppressed belief-based connectivity between putamen and its targets in IPS and dlPFC, and dispositional distress significantly modulated threat-related suppression of connectivity between the left TPJ seed and left IPS. These findings highlight the effects of both incidental and dispositional anxiety on specific nodes of the social cognition network.
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| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
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