Researchers at the California Institute of Technology say that the concept of fairness is processed in the insular cortex, or insula, which is also the seat of emotional reactions.
Fairness is more than just a dogma, it's an emotion wired in the human brain - at least that's what a new study suggests.
According to researchers at the California Institute of Technology, the concept of fairness is processed in the insular cortex, or insula, which is also the seat of emotional reactions."The fact that the brain has such a robust response to unfairness suggests that sensing unfairness is a basic evolved capacity," said Steven Quartz, an associate professor of philosophy at Caltech and author of the study.
"The movement to look into the neural basis for ethical decision making is only about seven years old. This is the first study where people made real decisions with real consequences," Quartz said.
The subjects in the study, 26 men and women between 28 and 55 years old, faced a real-world moral dilemma. They started their participation in the experiment by reading a short biography of each of the 60 orphans at the Canaan Children's Home in Uganda.
The orphanage would receive a sum of money that would depend on decisions the subjects made. In the end, 2,279 dollars was donated.
While a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine scanned their brains for peak activity regions, the participants each had about eight seconds to decide how to distribute meals among groups of children in different scenarios.
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Ultimately the subjects' brains made a choice, and Quartz and his collaborators got to peek into where that calculation was made. When they got to give food to the children, the study participants' orbital frontal cortex, the reward region of the brain, lit up.
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Quartz suggests that the insula was triggered by the inequity of the choices. The activity varied considerably across subjects, indicating that individual differences in moral sensitivity may be rooted in the strength of the biological responses, he added.
"The emotional response to unfairness pushes people from extreme inequity and drives them to be fair," Quartz says.
This observation, he adds, suggests that "our basic impulse to be fair isn't a complicated thing that we learn."
The study is published in the online edition of the journal Science.
Source-ANI
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