Neural Evidence for Inequality-averse Social Preferences
Nature, No. 463, pg. 1089-1091, 2010.
Elizabeth Tricomi,
Antonio Rangel,
Colin F. Camerer,
John P. O’Doherty
A popular hypothesis in the social sciences is that humans have social
preferences to reduce inequality in outcome distributions because it has
a negative impact on their experienced reward.
Although there is a large body of behavioural and anthropological
evidence consistent with the predictions of these theories,
there is no direct neural evidence for the existence of
inequality-averse preferences. Such evidence would be especially useful
because some behaviours that are consistent with a dislike for unequal
outcomes could also be explained by concerns for social image
or reciprocity,
which do not require a direct aversion towards inequality. Here we use
functional MRI to test directly for the existence of inequality-averse
social preferences in the human brain. Inequality was created by
recruiting pairs of subjects and giving one of them a large monetary
endowment. While both subjects evaluated further monetary transfers from
the experimenter to themselves and to the other participant, we
measured neural responses in the ventral striatum and ventromedial
prefrontal cortex, two areas that have been shown to be involved in the
valuation of monetary and primary rewards in both social and non-social
contexts.
Consistent with inequality-averse models of social preferences, we find
that activity in these areas was more responsive to transfers to others
than to self in the ‘high-pay’ subject, whereas the activity of the
‘low-pay’ subject showed the opposite pattern. These results provide
direct evidence for the validity of this class of models, and also show
that the brain’s reward circuitry is sensitive to both advantageous and
disadvantageous inequality.
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