Frontiers in Neurology (Oct 2023)

Economic and social values in the brain: evidence from lesions to the human ventromedial prefrontal cortex

  • Despina Messimeris,
  • Despina Messimeris,
  • Richard Levy,
  • Richard Levy,
  • Raphaël Le Bouc,
  • Raphaël Le Bouc

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2023.1198262
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Making good economic and social decisions is essential for individual and social welfare. Decades of research have provided compelling evidence that damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is associated with dramatic personality changes and impairments in economic and social decision-making. However, whether the vmPFC subserves a unified mechanism in the social and non-social domains remains unclear. When choosing between economic options, the vmPFC is thought to guide decision by encoding value signals that reflect the motivational relevance of the options on a common scale. A recent framework, the “extended common neural currency” hypothesis, suggests that the vmPFC may also assign values to social factors and principles, thereby guiding social decision-making. Although neural value signals have been observed in the vmPFC in both social and non-social studies, it is yet to be determined whether they have a causal influence on behavior or merely correlate with decision-making. In this review, we assess whether lesion studies of patients with vmPFC damage offer evidence for such a causal role of the vmPFC in shaping economic and social behavior.

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