ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Previous research showed that individuals have a natural tendency to conform to others. This study investigated the temporal characteristics of neural processing involved in social conformity by recording participants’ brain potentia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen Jing, Wu Yin, Tong Guangyu, Guan Xiaoming, Zhou Xiaolin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-05-01
Series:BMC Neuroscience
Subjects:
ERP
MFN
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2202/13/43
id doaj-0440726c481c410397f9a28e6d6c0e2b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0440726c481c410397f9a28e6d6c0e2b2020-11-24T21:44:38ZengBMCBMC Neuroscience1471-22022012-05-011314310.1186/1471-2202-13-43ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment taskChen JingWu YinTong GuangyuGuan XiaomingZhou Xiaolin<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Previous research showed that individuals have a natural tendency to conform to others. This study investigated the temporal characteristics of neural processing involved in social conformity by recording participants’ brain potentials in performing a line judgment task. After making his initial choice, a participant was presented with the choices of four same-sex group members, which could be congruent or highly or moderately incongruent with the participant’s own choice. The participant was then immediately given a second opportunity to respond to the same stimulus.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Participants were more likely to conform to the group members by changing their initial choices when these choices were in conflict with the group’s choices, and this behavioral adjustment occurred more often as the level of incongruence increased. Electrophysiologically, group choices that were incongruent with the participant’s choice elicited more negative-going medial frontal negativity (MFN), a component associated with processing expectancy violation, than those that were congruent with the participant’s choice, and the size of this effect increased as the level of incongruence increased. Moreover, at both levels of incongruence, the MFN responses were more negative-going for incongruent trials in which participants subsequently performed behavioral adjustment than for trials in which they stuck to their initial choices. Furthermore, over individual participants, participants who were more likely to conform to others (i.e., changing their initial choices) exhibited stronger MFN effect than individuals who were more independent.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These findings suggest that incongruence with group choices or opinions can elicit brain responses that are similar to those elicited by violation of non-social expectancy in outcome evaluation and performance monitoring, and these brain signals are utilized in the following behavioral adjustment. The present research complements recent brain imaging studies by showing the temporal characteristics of neural processing involved in social conformity and by suggesting common mechanisms for reinforcement learning in social and non-social situations.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2202/13/43Social conformityBehavioral adjustmentReinforcement learningERPMFN
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chen Jing
Wu Yin
Tong Guangyu
Guan Xiaoming
Zhou Xiaolin
spellingShingle Chen Jing
Wu Yin
Tong Guangyu
Guan Xiaoming
Zhou Xiaolin
ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
BMC Neuroscience
Social conformity
Behavioral adjustment
Reinforcement learning
ERP
MFN
author_facet Chen Jing
Wu Yin
Tong Guangyu
Guan Xiaoming
Zhou Xiaolin
author_sort Chen Jing
title ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
title_short ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
title_full ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
title_fullStr ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
title_full_unstemmed ERP correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
title_sort erp correlates of social conformity in a line judgment task
publisher BMC
series BMC Neuroscience
issn 1471-2202
publishDate 2012-05-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Previous research showed that individuals have a natural tendency to conform to others. This study investigated the temporal characteristics of neural processing involved in social conformity by recording participants’ brain potentials in performing a line judgment task. After making his initial choice, a participant was presented with the choices of four same-sex group members, which could be congruent or highly or moderately incongruent with the participant’s own choice. The participant was then immediately given a second opportunity to respond to the same stimulus.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Participants were more likely to conform to the group members by changing their initial choices when these choices were in conflict with the group’s choices, and this behavioral adjustment occurred more often as the level of incongruence increased. Electrophysiologically, group choices that were incongruent with the participant’s choice elicited more negative-going medial frontal negativity (MFN), a component associated with processing expectancy violation, than those that were congruent with the participant’s choice, and the size of this effect increased as the level of incongruence increased. Moreover, at both levels of incongruence, the MFN responses were more negative-going for incongruent trials in which participants subsequently performed behavioral adjustment than for trials in which they stuck to their initial choices. Furthermore, over individual participants, participants who were more likely to conform to others (i.e., changing their initial choices) exhibited stronger MFN effect than individuals who were more independent.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These findings suggest that incongruence with group choices or opinions can elicit brain responses that are similar to those elicited by violation of non-social expectancy in outcome evaluation and performance monitoring, and these brain signals are utilized in the following behavioral adjustment. The present research complements recent brain imaging studies by showing the temporal characteristics of neural processing involved in social conformity and by suggesting common mechanisms for reinforcement learning in social and non-social situations.</p>
topic Social conformity
Behavioral adjustment
Reinforcement learning
ERP
MFN
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2202/13/43
work_keys_str_mv AT chenjing erpcorrelatesofsocialconformityinalinejudgmenttask
AT wuyin erpcorrelatesofsocialconformityinalinejudgmenttask
AT tongguangyu erpcorrelatesofsocialconformityinalinejudgmenttask
AT guanxiaoming erpcorrelatesofsocialconformityinalinejudgmenttask
AT zhouxiaolin erpcorrelatesofsocialconformityinalinejudgmenttask
_version_ 1725908980236025856