SURPRISE! BRAIN SCANS SHOW COOPERATING IS THE
BRAIN'S DEFAULT MODE
In many professional service
firms it's been difficult to get those autonomy loving lawyers or accountants,
etc. to collaborate. The frequent expression is like "herding cats."
So we are surprised and pleased to see that a group of researchers based
at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia found that when a woman is involved
in a situation where she is cooperating with someone else, she experiences
activation in brain areas that are also activated by "rewards"
such as food, money and drugs. This indicates that our bodies may have
been somehow programmed to "tag cooperation as rewarding,"
study author Dr. Gregory S. Berns told Reuters Health..
Here is a synopsis from a
Reuters Health report byAlison McCook.
The researchers uncovered
the brain's reaction to cooperation by scanning the brains of 36 women
while they played a game known as the Prisoner's Dilemma. During the
game, a participant was told that she can either cooperate with a partner
or defect against her. After both independently make their choices,
they are awarded separate amounts based on both of their decisions.
The biggest payoff comes from defecting when your partner cooperates,
followed by, in decreasing order, both cooperating, both defecting,
then cooperating when your partner decides to defect.
Based on the logic of the
game, the most rational decision a player could make is to defect, which
ensures she will not get the least amount of money, and provides her
with the opportunity to earn the most. The researchers, led by Dr. James
K. Rilling, now at Princeton in New Jersey, scanned the brains of one
player, and instructed the other player to either play as she wished,
or follow certain rules when choosing either to defect or cooperate.
Despite the fact that defecting
is the most rational option, when both players were given the freedom
to choose as they wished, both decided to cooperate more often than
any other decision. Out of a total of 20 rounds, players chose to cooperate
an average of 11 times, compared to 2 to 3 times for each of the other
decision patterns. Using MRI scans, the investigators found that when
both players cooperated, the player whose brain was being scanned showed
significant activation in brain regions associated with reward. They
report their findings in the July 18th issue of Neuron.
The authors opted to use
all women to avoid any sexual undertones that might influence how women
and men behave with each other, Berns noted. He said he expected experiments
using only men would produce similar results to the current study, but
that further studies are needed to demonstrate if that is, in fact,
the case.
Berns admitted that he and
his colleagues were surprised to discover this finding. People can become
visibly upset when their opponent defects against them, and it was in
this situation the researchers had expected to see the strongest brain
activity.
One of the brain regions
activated during cooperation is also involved in impulse control. Dr.
Clinton D. Kilts, one of the authors of the study report, speculated
on the results if CEOs were studied instead. "Maybe they wouldn't
find a positive social interaction rewarding at all," he said.