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Journal Article

Citation

Zhang M, Liu T, Pelowski M, Jia H, Yu D. Brain Cogn. 2017; 119: 54-63.

Affiliation

Key Laboratory of Child Development and Learning Science, Ministry of Education, Southeast University, Nanjing, China; Research Center for Learning Science, School of Biological Science & Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, China. Electronic address: dcyu@seu.edu.cn.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.bandc.2017.08.008

PMID

28889923

Abstract

Previous neuroscience studies have investigated neural correlates of risky decision-making in a single-brain frame during pseudo social (predominantly non face-to-face) contexts. To fully understand the risky decision-making behavior in more natural social interactions, the present study employed a functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning technique to simultaneously measure pairs of participants' fronto-temporal activations in a face-to-face gambling card-game. The intra-brain results revealed that both those who identified as males and as females showed higher activations in their mPFC and in the inferior parts of the frontopolar area, as well as in the tempo-parietal junction (TPJ) in cases involving higher versus lower risk. This is consistent with previous findings suggesting importance of the mentalizing network in decision tasks. The fNIRS results of inter-brain neural synchronization (INS) also revealed that males and females showed increased inter-brain coherence in the mPFC and dlPFC. Females, however, uniquely showed increased inter-brain coherence in the left TPJ. This INS result suggests that males may primarily depend on non-social cognitive ability to make a risky decision in a social interaction, while females may use both social and non-social cognitive abilities. The implications are also discussed for general topics of human interaction and two-person neuroscience.

Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Inc.


Language: en

Keywords

Gender effect; Hyperscanning; Interpersonal synchronization; Risky decision-making; fNIRS

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