A Distinct Role of the Temporal-Parietal Junction in Predicting Socially Guided Decisions
Pensemos en la contribución que pueden hacer las neurociencias al tema de afrontar a los contrincantes en el deporte
A Distinct Role of the Temporal-Parietal Junction in Predicting Socially Guided Decisions
R. McKell Carter, Daniel L. Bowling, Crystal Reeck, Scott A. Huettel
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: scott.huettel{at}duke.edu
Abstract
To make adaptive decisions in a social context, humans must identify relevant agents in the environment, infer their underlying strategies and motivations, and predict their upcoming actions. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging, in conjunction with combinatorial multivariate pattern analysis, to predict human participants’ subsequent decisions in an incentive-compatible poker game. We found that signals from the temporal-parietal junction provided unique information about the nature of the upcoming decision, and that information was specific to decisions against agents who were both social and relevant for future behavior.
Science 6 July 2012: Vol. 337 no. 6090 pp. 109-111 DOI: 10.1126/science.1219681
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