Abstract
Studies on decision-making under uncertainty have mainly focused on understanding preferences for either risk or ambiguity using standard lottery designs. However, people often face uncertainty that directly stems from interacting with other people, which may be processed differently from lottery-based uncertainty. Here, we substantially extend the investigation of uncertainty by examining a fourfold pattern of the sources and the types of uncertainty, assessing behavioral and neural responses to both risk and ambiguity across both social and non-social contexts. A key element in our research design was to control for participants’ naturally occurring social beliefs, and taking these a priori beliefs into account allow us to elicit individual preferences in accordance with economic approaches that stress the dynamics of ambiguity preference as a function of underlying likelihoods. Using this design, we find a behavioral main effect of ambiguity aversion, with increasing ambiguity aversion as a function of higher beliefs regarding the likelihood of reciprocity, and related neural activity in the right IPS. This brain region was primarily involved when participants experienced lottery-based uncertainty as opposed to social uncertainty. However, we found that the right IFG was more involved when participants made decisions under social, as compared to non-social, uncertainty. Overall, therefore, the IPS may activate an analytic mindset, which might resonate more with a lottery than a social context, whereas the IFG is engaged when the context requires players to resolve uncertainty, such as unraveling the intentions behind the choice of another person.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 119007 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-15 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | NeuroImage |
Volume | 251 |
Early online date | 16 Feb 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 May 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This research was partially supported by a European Research Council grant to Alan Sanfey (ERC StG 313454 ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s)
Keywords
- ambiguity
- beliefs
- neuroeconomics
- risk