Tobias Kalenscher, Professor

时间: 2018-04-17 15:00 - 17:00

地点: #1113, Wangkezhen Building

Abstract: Inequity aversion is a behavioral, motivational and emotional response to an unfair reward distribution, given equal efforts to obtain rewards. Disadvantageous inequity aversion can be caused by a reward distribution that leaves the decision-maker worse off than a partner, advantageous inequity aversion can result from a reward distribution in which the decision-maker is better off than a partner. Both types of inequity aversion have been shown in humans and non-human primates, but it remains elusive if they evolved earlier in the phylogenetic history. In my talk, I will provide evidence that rats show disadvantageous and advantageous inequity aversion. I will argue that the rats’ social preferences are the consequence of social reinforcement learning in which acoustic social signals emitted by the two interacting rats orchestrate their preferences for equal reward outcomes. I will present lesion and psychopharmacological data highlighting the importance of basolateral amygdala in developing mutual reward preferences – the presumed motive underlying advantageous inequity aversion.

2018-04-12


2018-04-12