Abstract
Moral preferences pervade many aspects of our lives, dictating how we ought to behave, whom we can marry and even what we eat. Despite their relevance, one fundamental question remains unanswered: where do individual moral preferences come from? It is often thought that all types of preferences reflect properties of domain-general neural decision mechanisms that employ a common ‘neural currency’ to value choice options in many different contexts. This view, however, appears at odds with the observation that many humans consider it intuitively wrong to employ the same scale to compare moral value (e.g. of a human life) with material value (e.g. of money). In this paper, we directly test if moral subjective values are represented by similar neural processes as financial subjective values. In a study combining functional magnetic resonance imaging with a novel behavioral paradigm, we identify neural representations of the subjective values of human lives or financial payoffs by means of structurally identical computational models. Correlating isomorphic model variables from both domains with brain activity reveals specific patterns of neural activity that selectively represent values in the moral (right temporo-parietal junction) or financial (ventral-medial prefrontal cortex) domain. Intriguingly, our findings show that human lives and money are valued in (at least partially) distinct neural currencies, supporting theoretical proposals that human moral behavior is guided by processes that are distinct from those underlying behavior driven by personal material benefit.
Item Type: | Journal Article, refereed, original work |
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Communities & Collections: | 03 Faculty of Economics > Department of Economics |
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Dewey Decimal Classification: | 330 Economics |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | Moral preferences, subjective value, common currency neural network |
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Scope: | Discipline-based scholarship (basic research) |
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Language: | English |
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Date: | 26 February 2022 |
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Deposited On: | 16 Dec 2021 07:33 |
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Last Modified: | 26 Dec 2024 02:39 |
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Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
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ISSN: | 1749-5016 |
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OA Status: | Gold |
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Free access at: | PubMed ID. An embargo period may apply. |
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Publisher DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsab100 |
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Related URLs: | https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/184324/ |
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PubMed ID: | 34508645 |
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Other Identification Number: | merlin-id:21740 |
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Project Information: | - Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: 100014_165884
- Project Title: The role of dopamine in value-based decision making
- Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: 105314_152891
- Project Title: Neural evidence accumulation in perceptual versus value-based decision making
- Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: 320030_143443
- Project Title: Neural networks promoting strategies for long-term success over immediate gain in reward learning and decision making
- Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: CRSII3_141965
- Project Title: Neuroeconomics of value-based decision making
- Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: PBZHP1_147240
- Project Title: The neural basis of individual differences in moral decision-making
- Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: PP00P1_128574
- Project Title: The neural basis of economic and moral utility
- Funder: SNSF
- Grant ID: PP00P1_150739
- Project Title: The neural basis of economic and moral utility
- Funder: H2020
- Grant ID: 725355
- Project Title: BRAINCODES - Brain networks controlling social decisions
- Funder: H2020
- Grant ID: 758604
- Project Title: ENTRAINER - Enhancing brain function and cognition via artificial entrainment of neural oscillations
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