Thursday 11 March 2010

Publications
A Functional Imaging Study of Cooperation in Two-Person Reciprocal Exchange
Behavior in a Dynamic Decision Problem:
Cultural Group Selection: Discussion
Dynamic Classification
Experimental Methods In Economics
Game Theory in Experiments
How do Behavioral Assumptions Affect Structural Inference
Identifying Individual Differences: An Algorithm With Application to Phineas Gage
Law and Neuroeconomics
Neuroeconomics
Oligopoly Competition in Fixed Cost Environments
Positive Reciprocity and Intentions in Trust Games
Preferences, Property Rights, and Anonymity in Bargaining Games
Reciprocity and Social Order
Risk Preference Instability Across Institutions: A Dilemma
Smart Computer-Assisted Markets
Social Distance and Other-Regarding Behavior in Dictator Games
The Brain and the Law
The Impact of the Certainty Context on the Process of Choice
Trust, Reciprocity, and Social History
What Makes Trade Possible

A Functional Imaging Study of Cooperation in Two-Person Reciprocal Exchange

Cooperation between individuals requires the ability to infer each other?s mental states to form shared expectations over mutual gains and make cooperative choices that realize these gains.  From evidence that the ability for mental state attribution involves the use of prefrontal cortex, we hypothesize that this area is involved in integrating theory-of-mind processing with cooperative actions.  We report data from a functional MRI experiment designed to test this hypothesis.  Subjects in a scanner played standard two-person ??trust and reciprocity?? games with both human and computer counterparts for cash rewards.  Behavioral data shows that seven subjects consistently attempted cooperation with their human counterpart.  Within this group prefrontal regions are more active when subjects are playing a human than when they are playing a computer following a fixed (and known) probabilistic strategy.  Within the group of five noncooperators, there are no significant differences in prefrontal activation between computer and human conditions.

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