4.6 Article

Neuroanatomical and functional substrates of the greed personality trait

Journal

BRAIN STRUCTURE & FUNCTION
Volume 226, Issue 4, Pages 1269-1280

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00429-021-02240-9

Keywords

Greed; Multivariate pattern analysis; VBM; Reward circuitry; Intertemporal choice

Funding

  1. Humanities and Social Science Fund Project of the Ministry of Education [20YJC190018]
  2. Major Project of National Social Science Foundation of China [20ZDA079]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32000786, 31800920]

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This study explores the morphological characteristics and brain activations associated with the greed personality trait, revealing specific brain regions linked to greed and different relationships between delay and reward-related brain activations with individual variability in greed scores.
Greedy individuals often exhibit more impulsive decision-making and short-sighted behaviors. It has been assumed that altered reward circuitry and prospection network is associated with greed personality trait (GPT). In this study, we first explored the morphological characteristics (i.e., gray matter volume; GMV) of GPT combined with univariate and multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) approaches. Second, we adopted a revised version of inter-temporal choice task and independently manipulated the amount and delay time of future rewards. Using brain-imaging design, reward- and prospection-related brain activations were assessed and their associations with GPT were further examined. The MVPA results showed that GPT was associated with the GMVs in the right lateral frontal pole cortex, left ventromedial prefrontal cortex, right lateral occipital cortex, and right occipital pole. Additionally, we observed that the amount-relevant brain activations (responding to reward circuitry) in the lateral orbitofrontal cortex were negatively associated with individual's variability in GPT scores, whereas the delay time-relevant brain activations (responding to prospection network system) in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, superior parietal lobule, and anterior cingulate cortex were positively associated with individual's variability in GPT scores. These findings not only provide novel insights into the neuroanatomical substrates underlying the human dispositional greed, but also suggest the critical roles of reward and prospection processing on the greed.

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