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dc.contributor.author Billeke, Pablo
dc.contributor.author Zamorano, Francisco
dc.contributor.author Cosmelli, Diego
dc.contributor.author Aboitiz, Francisco
dc.date.accessioned 2024-09-26T00:46:26Z
dc.date.available 2024-09-26T00:46:26Z
dc.date.issued 2013-12
dc.identifier.issn 1047-3211
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.uss.cl/handle/uss/13474
dc.description Funding Information: This work was supported by CONICYT (Grant number 24100226) and by the Millenium Center for the Neuroscience of Memory, Chile (NC10-001-F), which is developed with funds from the Innovation for Competitivity from the Ministry for Economics, Fomentation and Tourism, Chile.
dc.description.abstract In social interactions, the perception of how risky our decisions are depends on how we anticipate other people's behaviors. We used electroencephalography to study the neurobiology of perception of social risk, in subjects playing the role of proposers in an iterated ultimatum game in pairs. Based on statistical modeling, we used the previous behaviors of both players to separate high-risk [HR] offers from low-risk [LR] offers. The HR offers present higher rejection probability and higher entropy (variability of possible outcome) than the LR offers. Rejections of LR offers elicited both a stronger mediofrontal negativity and a higher prefrontal theta activity than rejections of HR offers. Moreover, prior to feedback, HR offers generated a drop in alpha activity in an extended network. Interestingly, trial-by-trial variation in alpha activity in the medial prefrontal, posterior temporal, and inferior pariental cortex was specifically modulated by risk and, together with theta activity in the prefrontal and posterior cingulate cortex, predicted the proposer's subsequent behavior. Our results provide evidence that alpha and theta oscillations are sensitive to social risk and underlie a fine-tuning regulation of social decisions. en
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof vol. 23 Issue: no. 12 Pages: 2872-2883
dc.source Cerebral Cortex
dc.title Oscillatory brain activity correlates with risk perception and predicts social decisions. en
dc.type Artículo
dc.identifier.doi 10.1093/cercor/bhs269
dc.publisher.department Facultad de Ciencias para el Cuidado de la Salud


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