Social decision making: from neuroscience to culture
Speaker: George Christopoulos Post: Assistant Professor
Unit: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Participated in: the Department of Psychology all teachers and students
Venue: sun room Time: 2016.12.19
Abstract:
Decision-making is a central function of the human brain and social life overall. Understanding this complex function necessitates the integration of multiple methods and approaches, ranging from neuro-computational methods, game theory and lab experiments to social psychology and culture science. In my lab, we adopt such an approach allowing us to understand decision making at multiple levels. Firstly, (i) I will present evidence describing human brain signals that are sensitive to basic decision making parameters (money and risk). Subsequently, (ii) additional neuroimaging studies explain how competition and cooperation are represented in the human brain; how trust is a form of “social risk”; and how social influence impacts risky decision making.Finally, (iii) I will present more recent work examining how culture can act as a maternal attachment figure and how Asian culture affects decision making. I will finish with a call for the establishment of a multi-disciplinary network of Asian-based researchers aiming in the improvement of mental health via a better understanding of the interaction between the built environment, culture and human neurobiology.