4.3 Article

Age Differences in Intuitive Moral Decision-Making: Associations With Inter-Network Neural Connectivity

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING
Volume 36, Issue 8, Pages 902-916

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/pag0000633

Keywords

aging; moral cognition; decision-making; resting-state fMRI; functional connectivity

Funding

  1. NIH [1S10RR025145, AG057764]
  2. Canadian Institute of Health Research

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Older adults tend to endorse deontological decisions, especially when the choice is intuitive, while there is no difference between younger and older adults in utilitarian decisions when intuitive. Enhanced brain connections in older adults are associated with their increased deontological-intuitive moral decision-making style.
Positions of power involving moral decision-making are often held by older adults (OAs). However, little is known about age differences in moral decision-making and the intrinsic organization of the aging brain. In this study, younger adults (YAs; n = 117, M-age = 22.11) and OAs (n = 82, M-age = 67.54) made decisions in hypothetical moral dilemmas and completed resting-state multi-echo functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans. Relative to YAs, OAs were more likely to endorse deontological decisions (i.e., decisions based on adherence to a moral principle or duty), but only when the choice was immediately compelling or intuitive. By contrast, there was no difference between YAs and OAs in utilitarian decisions (i.e., decisions aimed at maximizing collective well-being) when the utilitarian choice was intuitive. Enhanced connections between the posterior medial core of the default network (pmDN) and the dorsal attention network, and overall reduced segregation of pmDN from the rest of the brain, were associated with this increased deontological-intuitive moral decision-making style in OAs. The present study contributes to our understanding of age differences in decision-making styles by taking into account the intuitiveness of the moral choice, and it offers further insights as to how age differences in intrinsic brain connectivity relate to these distinct moral decision-making styles in YAs and OAs.

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