A new Frontiers in Science ebook here. The blurb:
With the rise of laboratory and field experimental economics, the famous
prisoner's dilemma, public good, dictator, ultimatum, and trust games
have become the classical paradigms of studying prosocial behavior. Due
to the increasing use of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI),
transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial direct current
stimulation (tDCS) with human subjects playing economic games, the
neural basis of prosocial behavior has been uncovered by a large amount
of neural imaging and stimulating research. A wide range of brain areas
including, but not limited to the prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal
cortex, cingulate cortex, striatum and amygdale have been revealed
highly correlated or causally related with prosocial behaviors.
A
number of hypotheses such as empathy, altruism, reciprocity, inequality
aversion, or guilt aversion preferences have been considered as motives
promoting prosocial behavior. However, the neural bases of these
different preferences have seldom been revealed and the mechanisms of
how these preferences influence prosocial behavior have rarely been
discussed. Moreover, since prosocial behavior may be due to the
cooperative work of several brain areas (neural network), it is
essential to integrate findings from difference disciplines including
psychology, economics, neuroscience, and to nearly all the social and
behavioral sciences.
The present Research Topic of Frontiers in
Psychology aims to bring a collection of research revealing the neural
basis of human prosocial behavior. Interdisciplinary research
investigating brain areas influencing prosocial behaviors is highly
encouraged. We believe sharing relevant brain imaging and stimulation
findings can promote a better understanding of neural basis of prosocial
behavior.
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