A NeW StudY Shows HoW our BraiN ResPonD to InjusticE

in science •  7 years ago 

People are particularly sensitive to injustice because in our brain there are specific brain networks involved both in perception and in response to social injustices.

This is revealed by a new experimental research conducted by Mirre Stallen of the Erasmus University in Rotterdam, in the Netherlands and colleagues from other Dutch and US institutions, published in the journal "Journal of Neuroscience" , which also revealed some interesting and partly unexpected data .


Credits Pixabay

For our brains, in fact, punishing a criminal can be more rewarding than rescuing a victim. Moreover, our tendency to inflict punishment is greater when we suffer the wrong in the first person and is influenced by the levels of a specific hormone, oxytocin.

The study involved some volunteers in a simulation, a game in pairs in which one player could damage the other by subtracting tokens. A third subject could observe the game and intervene punishing the first player or compensating the second for the damage suffered. Meanwhile, the researchers conducted a series of brain imaging scans on the volunteers to highlight areas that were activated gradually while doing their job.

The first result was that each participant was more likely to punish the wrongdoer when he suffered injustice personally than when he was a mere observer. The decision to punish was associated with activity in the ventral portion of the striatum, a brain region involved in the processing of reward signals. The neuroimaging scans also detected the activation of other areas: the anterior portion of the insula, associated with the decisions to punish the damage suffered, and the amygdala, related to the degree of severity of the punishment.

In inflicting punishment, an important role is played by oxytocin. The data was already known in general terms, but the tests have better circumscribed the action of this hormone. When the experimenters administered it to some subjects before the start of the tests, these tended to punish the malefactors more frequently, albeit with milder sentences.

Overall, the authors write, these results provide a more in-depth view of the fundamental brain mechanisms underlying punishment and compensation of wrongs, and also illustrate the importance of adopting a multidisciplinary approach when studying the complex components of decision-making processes that affect everyday life.

References For Further Reading

Research Gate

Neuro Science

Medical Xpress

Science Daily


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I guess the only time most people think about injustice is when it happens to them..bitter truth

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

You got a 2.15% upvote from @buildawhale courtesy of @afifa!
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This post has received a 39.68% upvote from @aksdwi thanks to: @afifa.

painting with a very beautiful description

if justice and the idea of wrong and right are rooted on individual's unique value system, how the quantification of response can be regarded as unbiased? if there were rules to conduct punishment, how is it any metric of response at all? They were either following rule to punish or they were punishing because of completely arbitrary value system.

really a research, but this is the way of life.

great post :) was a very interesting read

Thank you.

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We have many things to do....

Look at this experiment

ps. tnx for this blog

nice post @afifa :) i like to read it because it is very interesting ...