Journal
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 35, Issue 22, Pages 8507-8514Publisher
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0526-15.2015
Keywords
decision-making; frontal lobes; human; neuropolitics; neuropsychology; social neuroscience
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Funding
- Quebec Fund for Research, Society, and Culture
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research Grant [MOP 97821]
- Montreal Neurological Institute
- University of Pennsylvania
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Recent studies of political behavior suggest that voting decisions can be influenced substantially by first-impression social attributions based on physical appearance. Separate lines of research have implicated the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) in the judgment of social traits on the one hand and economic decision-making on the other, making this region a plausible candidate for linking social attributions to voting decisions. Here, we asked whether OFC lesions in humans disrupted the ability to judge traits of political candidates or affected how these judgments influenced voting decisions. Seven patients with lateral OFC damage, 18 patients with frontal damage sparing the lateral OFC, and 53 matched healthy participants took part in a simulated election paradigm, in which they voted for real-life (but unknown) candidates based only on photographs of their faces. Consistent with previous work, attributions of competence and attractiveness based on candidate appearance predicted voting behavior in the healthy control group. Frontal damage did not affect substantially the ability to make competence or attractiveness judgments, but patients with damage to the lateral OFC differed from other groups in how they applied this information when voting. Only attractiveness ratings had any predictive power for voting choices after lateral OFC damage, whereas other frontal patients and healthy controls relied on information about both competence and attractiveness in making their choice. An intact lateral OFC may not be necessary for judgment of social traits based on physical appearance, but it seems to be crucial in applying this information in political decision-making.
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