frontiersinneuroscience | Is social decision-making unique? How does it differ
from non-social decision-making? The answers to these questions have
been of interest to researchers in a variety of fields including social
psychology and behavioral economics. Combining these literatures can
help us understand the answers to these questions. Economists originally
believed that social decision-making was not different from non-social
decision-making and tried to model social decisions with traditional
economic models. However, after the influential paper by Tversky and Kahneman (1974)
demonstrating heuristics and biases affecting decision-making, it
became apparent that the decision-making process is not as rational as
we may have originally thought. Psychologists have long believed that
social cognition is important for predicting the actions of others and
that humans are different from objects in some very important ways. More
recently, brain-imaging studies have highlighted these differences,
with a network of brain regions responding to social stimuli and social
cognitive processes that presumably affect social decision-making.
Investigations of social decisions have also highlighted the effects of
social information on decision-making processes within brain regions
like the striatum and MPFC. Although both social and non-social agents
engage these brain regions, the social context modulates this activity.
The use of mathematical models suggests that both social neuroscience
and neuroeconomics studies have each been tapping into different
processes. Initial impressions allow for predictions that guide
decision-making. These impressions then interact with feedback
processing and affect how predictions are updated.
In economics, behavioral game theorists recognize that
people's beliefs about others matter when modeling social decisions. The
models assume that players strategically choose options that maximize
utility, and evaluations of payoff options often include social factors
beyond pure economic payout (Camerer, 2009).
These social factors may include other-regarding preferences,
indicating that people care about the well-being of other players (Fehr, 2009).
Whether decisions are made in order to increase the well-being of
others or manage the impression formed of oneself, mental state
inferences are still relevant. For instance, one may assess well-being
by inferring the mental state of the person. Similarly, the extent to
which one infers the mental state of a person may influence the extent
to which other-regarding preferences influence decisions (e.g., do
people show other-regarding preferences for traditionally dehumanized
targets?).
Humans evolved in a social context in which interacting
with other people was essential for survival. As such, these social
cognitive processes have been evolutionarily preserved and continue to
affect our decision-making in a social context. The fact that human
agents engage different brain regions than computer agents should
perhaps not be all that surprising. The social brain did not evolve
interacting with computers or other types of machines. Therefore, we see
differences not only in behavior (most of the time) but also
differences in brain activity for these two inherently different types
agents. Here we have highlighted that these differences lie in
engagement of the social cognition/person perception brain regions for
human agents. But the underlying mechanisms—the social processes that
engage these brain regions and how they interact with decision-making
processes—are still being investigated. Social psychological theory can
help answer these questions by providing a theoretical background for
why human and computers differ in the first place (e.g., mental state
inferences, impression management, etc). Keeping this fact in mind will
provide future research on social decision-making with the most informed
and cohesive theories.
Finally, decisions are made in a social context everyday.
Whether deciding to do a favor for a friend or close a deal with a
potential business partner, decisions have consequences that lead to
significant rewards and punishments such as a better relationship with
the friend or a poor business transaction. Therefore, it is important to
understand how decisions are influenced by the presence or absence of
others and how we incorporate social information into our
decision-making process. Here we have highlighted differences arising
when interacting with human and computer agents and use social
psychological theory to provide some explanation for why these
differences arise. It is important to point out these differences in
social and non-social decision-making because interactions with
computers and other machines are becoming more widespread. Businesses
often try to find ways to simplify transactions, often replacing human
agents with automated computers. However, the decisions made with these
different types of agents may affect businesses in unanticipated ways.
Financial decisions (e.g., buying and selling stock) are increasingly
made through the use of online computers, whereas previously investors
had to interact with stockbrokers in an investment firm. Similarly
people are able to bid in online auctions for a desired item rather than
sitting in a room full of people holding numbered paddles. The
decisions to buy and sell stock or possibly overbid in an online auction
may be influenced by these different agents, as evidenced by the
research described above.
2 comments:
This is not only low class workers, but many IT workers got caught up in that also. They go over there, then the next thing, they have "scope creep" and "owe money" and have to pay it back and can't leave....
Not many plantations in Missouri. So..., the predominant modality of slave revenue generation came in the form of "slave leasing". Leased slaves by-and-large had advanced vocational skills, and consequently, their labor value was higher than just low-skill workers and exceptionally competitive with the free skilled trades with whom their "owners" directly sought to compete.
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