Authors
Frank Krueger, Kevin McCabe, Jorge Moll, Nikolaus Kriegeskorte, Roland Zahn, Maren Strenziok, Armin Heinecke, Jordan Grafman
Publication date
2007/12/11
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
104
Issue
50
Pages
20084-20089
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Trust is a critical social process that helps us to cooperate with others and is present to some degree in all human interaction. However, the underlying brain mechanisms of conditional and unconditional trust in social reciprocal exchange are still obscure. Here, we used hyperfunctional magnetic resonance imaging, in which two strangers interacted online with one another in a sequential reciprocal trust game while their brains were simultaneously scanned. By designing a nonanonymous, alternating multiround game, trust became bidirectional, and we were able to quantify partnership building and maintenance. Using within- and between-brain analyses, an examination of functional brain activity supports the hypothesis that the preferential activation of different neuronal systems implements these two trust strategies. We show that the paracingulate cortex is critically involved in building a trust relationship by …
Total citations
200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241422293125423932294128433335341014
Scholar articles
F Krueger, K McCabe, J Moll, N Kriegeskorte, R Zahn… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007