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      Impaired social decision making in patients with major depressive disorder

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          Abstract

          Research on how depression influences social decision making has been scarce. This study investigated how people with depression make decisions in an interpersonal trust-reciprocity game. Fifty female patients diagnosed with major depressive disorders (MDDs) and 49 healthy women participated in this study. The experiment was conducted on a one-to-one basis. Participants were asked to play the role of a trustee responsible for investing money given to them by an anonymous female investor playing on another computer station. In each trial, the investor would send to a participant (the trustee) a request for a certain percentage of the appreciated investment (repayment proportion). Since only the participant knew the exact amount of the appreciated investment, she could decide to pay more (altruistic act), the same, or less (deceptive act) than the requested amount. The participant's money acquired in the trial would be confiscated if her deceptive act was caught. The frequency of deceptive or altruistic decisions and relative monetary gain in each decision choice were examined. People with depression made fewer deceptive and fewer altruistic responses than healthy controls in all conditions. Moreover, the specific behavioral pattern presented by people with depression was modulated by the task factors, including the risk of deception detection and others’ intentions (benevolence vs. malevolence). Findings of this study contribute to furthering our understanding of the specific pattern of social behavioral changes associated with depression.

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          The neuroscience of social decision-making.

          Given that we live in highly complex social environments, many of our most important decisions are made in the context of social interactions. Simple but sophisticated tasks from a branch of experimental economics known as game theory have been used to study social decision-making in the laboratory setting, and a variety of neuroscience methods have been used to probe the underlying neural systems. This approach is informing our knowledge of the neural mechanisms that support decisions about trust, reciprocity, altruism, fairness, revenge, social punishment, social norm conformity, social learning, and competition. Neural systems involved in reward and reinforcement, pain and punishment, mentalizing, delaying gratification, and emotion regulation are commonly recruited for social decisions. This review also highlights the role of the prefrontal cortex in prudent social decision-making, at least when social environments are relatively stable. In addition, recent progress has been made in understanding the neural bases of individual variation in social decision-making.
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            Heart strings and purse strings: Carryover effects of emotions on economic decisions.

            We examined the impact of specific emotions on the endowment effect, the tendency for selling prices to exceed buying or "choice" prices for the same object. As predicted by appraisal-tendency theory, disgust induced by a prior, irrelevant situation carried over to normatively unrelated economic decisions, reducing selling and choice prices and eliminating the endowment effect. Sadness also carried over, reducing selling prices but increasing choice prices--producing a "reverse endowment effect" in which choice prices exceeded selling prices. The results demonstrate that incidental emotions can influence decisions even when real money is at stake, and that emotions of the same valence can have opposing effects on such decisions.
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              Social decision-making: insights from game theory and neuroscience.

              By combining the models and tasks of Game Theory with modern psychological and neuroscientific methods, the neuroeconomic approach to the study of social decision-making has the potential to extend our knowledge of brain mechanisms involved in social decisions and to advance theoretical models of how we make decisions in a rich, interactive environment. Research has already begun to illustrate how social exchange can act directly on the brain's reward system, how affective factors play an important role in bargaining and competitive games, and how the ability to assess another's intentions is related to strategic play. These findings provide a fruitful starting point for improved models of social decision-making, informed by the formal mathematical approach of economics and constrained by known neural mechanisms.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Brain Behav
                Brain Behav
                brb3
                Brain and Behavior
                Blackwell Publishing Inc (Hoboken, NJ, USA )
                2162-3279
                2162-3279
                July 2012
                : 2
                : 4
                : 415-423
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleLaboratory of Neuropsychology, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong, China
                [2 ]simpleLaboratory of Cognitive Affective Neuroscience, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong, China
                [3 ]simpleThe State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong, China
                [4 ]simpleInstitute of Clinical Neuropsychology Hong Kong, China
                Author notes
                Tatia M. C. Lee, K610, Laboratory of Neuropsychology, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong. Tel: +(852) 2857-8394; Fax: +(852) 2819-0978; E-mail: tmclee@ 123456hku.hk
                [*]

                Both authors contributed equally to this work.

                Article
                10.1002/brb3.62
                3432964
                22950045
                eac09198-d962-4ba1-84ef-8ae2684d7b2f
                © 2012 The Authors. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                History
                : 27 August 2011
                : 28 March 2012
                : 08 April 2012
                Categories
                Original Research

                Neurosciences
                risky decision making,trust,depression,altruism,deception,affective disorders
                Neurosciences
                risky decision making, trust, depression, altruism, deception, affective disorders

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