Zapping the Brain Makes
People Obey Social Norms
By Tanya Lewis, Staff
Writer | October 03, 2013 02:05pm ET
|
From dress codes to anti-incest laws, all human societies have social norms that specify how people should behave in various situations. Scientists have now shown that a zap of electricity to the brain can influence whether people choose to comply with these norms or not.
"The complexity of
human interactions is so big, so independent, that our society wouldn’t
function without norms, said study researcher Christian Ruff, an economics
professor at the University of Zurich, in
Switzerland. "Even though humans are very
good at following norms, we're always tempted to break them. We need
punishment threats to follow correctly," Ruff told LiveScience.
A previous study using
function magnetic resonance imaging showed that the right lateral prefrontal
cortex (rLPFC) is activated when people follow social norms to avoid being
punished. Ruff and colleagues wondered if stimulating this area could make
people more or less sensitive to the threat of
punishment. [The 10 Most
Destructive Human Behaviors]
Money games
The researchers recruited
Swiss female college students, who interacted with each
other via a computer game with real monetary consequences.
During the experiment,
researchers applied small electrical shocks called transcranial
direct current stimulation to the rLPFC region of some of the
participants' brains. By varying the direction of the electrical current, the
researchers could either boost or decrease brain activity in this region. Some
participants did not receive brain zaps, and so served as a control group.
Students were paired up, and
one student was given a sum of money, which she could choose how to split with
another student. If the recipient felt the
split was unfair, she could "punish" the donor student by taking away
some of the donor's money and investing it.
The students who started
with the money voluntarily chose to give away only 10–20 percent on average.
When the recipient punished them by taking the remaining funds away, the donor
students gave away 40–50 percent in subsequent rounds — closer to the fairness norm in
Western cultures of a 50-50 split, Ruff said.
The brain stimulation had
very different effects depending on whether students were voluntarily following
the norm as opposed to when they were threatened with punishment.
When the threat of
punishment was present, brain-boosting stimulation caused students to give away
more money, while brain-reducing stimulation made them give away less money. In
contrast, when giving was voluntary, boosting and reducing brain stimulation
had the opposite effects, making the students give away less money or more
money, respectively.
Ruff and his colleagues
also had the students play the money game with computers rather than with other
students. In this case, stimulating the rLPFC had much weaker effects.
Context matters
The findings, detailed today
(Oct. 3) in the journal Science, suggest that the rLPFC does not simply
function as a switch that makes people comply with social norms. Rather, this
brain area uses the social context to determine whether to comply with norms or
not.
"Here, brain
stimulation to the exact same region has opposite effects on cooperative
behavior that depend entirely on context," said neuroscientist Joshua
Buckholtz of Harvard University, who was not involved with the study. Buckholtz
suggested that the context of having a punishment threat or not could be changing
the connectivity between the rLPFC and other brain areas.
The idea that the brain
could be manipulated to make people more compliant with social norms has
far-reaching implications for the legal system. "If we know this
mechanism, we might think about ways to influence it to help people who have
trouble following norms," Ruff said. But it's not as easy as simply
zapping a criminal's
brain to make them comply with the law.
"There's a big
difference between acute modification in the lab and a long-term change in the
way people represent and process social norms in nature," Buckholtz said.
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Original article on LiveScience.
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