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keehah
29th January 2012, 11:39 PM
The Price of Your Soul: How the Brain Decides Whether to 'Sell Out' (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120122201240.htm)
ScienceDaily (Jan. 22, 2012) — A neuro-imaging study shows that personal values that people refuse to disavow, even when offered cash to do so, are processed differently in the brain than those values that are willingly sold.

"Our experiment found that the realm of the sacred -- whether it's a strong religious belief, a national identity or a code of ethics -- is a distinct cognitive process," says Gregory Berns, director of the Center for Neuropolicy at Emory University and lead author of the study. The results were published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.

Sacred values prompt greater activation of an area of the brain associated with rules-based, right-or-wrong thought processes, the study showed, as opposed to the regions linked to processing of costs-versus-benefits.

Berns headed a team that included economists and information scientists from Emory University, a psychologist from the New School for Social Research and anthropologists from the Institute Jean Nicod in Paris, France. The research was funded by the U.S. Office of Naval Research, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Science Foundation.

"We've come up with a method to start answering scientific questions about how people make decisions involving sacred values, and that has major implications if you want to better understand what influences human behavior across countries and cultures," Berns says. "We are seeing how fundamental cultural values are represented in the brain."

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to record the brain responses of 32 U.S. adults during key phases of an experiment. In the first phase, participants were shown statements ranging from the mundane, such as "You are a tea drinker," to hot-button issues such "You support gay marriage" and "You are Pro-Life." Each of the 62 statements had a contradictory pair, such as "You are Pro-Choice," and the participants had to choose one of each pair.

At the end of the experiment, participants were given the option of auctioning their personal statements: Disavowing their previous choices for actual money. The participants could earn as much as $100 per statement by simply agreeing to sign a document stating the opposite of what they believed. They could choose to opt out of the auction for statements they valued highly.

"We used the auction as a measure of integrity for specific statements," Berns explains. "If a person refused to take money to change a statement, then we considered that value to be personally sacred to them. But if they took money, then we considered that they had low integrity for that statement and that it wasn't sacred."

The brain imaging data showed a strong correlation between sacred values and activation of the neural systems associated with evaluating rights and wrongs (the left temporoparietal junction) and semantic rule retrieval (the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex), but not with systems associated with reward.

"Most public policy is based on offering people incentives and disincentives," Berns says. "Our findings indicate that it's unreasonable to think that a policy based on costs-and-benefits analysis will influence people's behavior when it comes to their sacred personal values, because they are processed in an entirely different brain system than incentives."

Research participants who reported more active affiliations with organizations, such as churches, sports teams, musical groups and environmental clubs, had stronger brain activity in the same brain regions that correlated to sacred values. "Organized groups may instill values more strongly through the use of rules and social norms," Berns says.

The experiment also found activation in the amygdala, a brain region associated with emotional reactions, but only in cases where participants refused to take cash to state the opposite of what they believe. "Those statements represent the most repugnant items to the individual," Berns says, "and would be expected to provoke the most arousal, which is consistent with the idea that when sacred values are violated, that induces moral outrage."

The study is part of a special issue of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, titled "The Biology of Cultural Conflict." Berns edited the special issue, which brings together a dozen articles on the culture of neuroscience, including differences in the neural processing of people on the opposing sides of conflict, from U.S. Democrats and Republicans to Arabs and Israelis.

"As culture changes, it affects our brains, and as our brains change, that affects our culture. You can't separate the two," Berns says. "We now have the means to start understanding this relationship, and that's putting the relatively new field of cultural neuroscience onto the global stage."

Future conflicts over politics and religion will likely play out biologically, Berns says. Some cultures will choose to change their biology, and in the process, change their culture, he notes. He cites the battles over women's reproductive rights and gay marriage as ongoing examples.

Full list of questions, and the responses by the subjects. (http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/suppl/2012/01/18/rstb.2011.0262.DC1/rstb20110262supp1.pdf)

Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Emory University. The original article was written by Carol Clark.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.
Journal Reference:
G. S. Berns, E. Bell, C. M. Capra, M. J. Prietula, S. Moore, B. Anderson, J. Ginges, S. Atran. The price of your soul: neural evidence for the non-utilitarian representation of sacred values. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2012; 367 (1589): 754 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2011.0262

Much ado about Stoicism?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoicism

From its founding, Stoic doctrine was a popular and durable philosophy, with a following throughout Greece and the Roman Empire, including the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, until the closing of all philosophy schools in 529 AD by order of the Emperor Justinian I, who perceived their pagan character as at odds with the Christian faith.

Neuro
30th January 2012, 04:08 AM
Great expect designed drugs in the tap water that adress these 'sacred' neural pathways, and/or surgeries at re-education FEMA camps that destroys parts of the brain were strong moral values are processed. I doubt anything good will come out of this...

letter_factory
30th January 2012, 05:35 AM
To do that, they'd probably have to wipe out your entire brain, effectively making you no longer worth buying out. It's not just a cognitive process, but also all the memories associated to your existence. For example, what would it take to sell out your family? Even if you were to take cash and sell out, all the memories associated would haunt you after the fact....is it worth all the money in the world then? For most people, it would be no.


Another way to think of it would be would any amount of alcohol cause you to cheat on your spouse? For most people, they would black out first, thereby making sex not worth it.

Neuro
30th January 2012, 07:51 AM
No they wouldn't need to wipe out your entire brain, only the parts that are strongly associated with the moral resistance, this is no different than the lobotomies performed in the 30's and onwards to change personalities, with this technique you could just take out a smaller part of the brain to achieve the result you would like, thus smaller side effects in terms of change of personality.

undgrd
30th January 2012, 08:04 AM
To do that, they'd probably have to wipe out your entire brain, effectively making you no longer worth buying out. It's not just a cognitive process, but also all the memories associated to your existence. For example, what would it take to sell out your family? Even if you were to take cash and sell out, all the memories associated would haunt you after the fact....is it worth all the money in the world then? For most people, it would be no.


Another way to think of it would be would any amount of alcohol cause you to cheat on your spouse? For most people, they would black out first, thereby making sex not worth it.


While I agree with what you've said and your examples, I have to ask you something. What makes you think the person or group trying to get you to sell out cares what happens to you once you do? If you've got info they want, your well being could be irrelevant after that info is extracted.

Edit: If they can temporarily disable or rewire your moral center to extract info you would normally not give or commit an act you would normally not, they've got their control mechanism.

gunDriller
30th January 2012, 08:28 AM
they should neuro-image some Jews' brains.

get Kissinger's brain & Greenspan's brain up there. might learn something.

madfranks
30th January 2012, 12:10 PM
"We used the auction as a measure of integrity for specific statements," Berns explains. "If a person refused to take money to change a statement, then we considered that value to be personally sacred to them. But if they took money, then we considered that they had low integrity for that statement and that it wasn't sacred."

Or they realized it was a quick way to make a hundred bucks and didn't care that they had to sign a form saying they support something they actually don't.