The brain adapts to dishonesty (original) (raw)

References

  1. Maremont, M. Anatomy of the Kurzweil fraud. Bus. Week 16 Sept. 1996.
  2. Kirchner, B. The Bernard Madoff Investment Scam (FT Press, 2010).
  3. McLean, B. & Elkind, P. The Smartest Guys in the Room: The Amazing Rise and Scandalous Fall of Enron (Penguin, 2013).
  4. Stapel, D. Ontsporing (Prometheus Amsterdam, 2012).
  5. Graham, C., Litan, R.E. & Sukhtankar, S. The Bigger They Are, The Harder They Fall: An Estimate of the Costs of the Crisis in Corporate Governance. (The Brookings Institution, 2002). Available at: http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2002/07/22corporategovernance-graham.
  6. Mauro, P. Corruption and growth. Q. J. Econ. 110, 681–712 (1995).
    Article Google Scholar
  7. Tanzi, V. & Davoodi, H. Corruption, Public Investment, and Growth (Springer, 1998).
  8. Heyneman, S.P., Anderson, K.H. & Nuraliyeva, N. The cost of corruption in higher education. Comp. Educ. Rev. 52, 1–25 (2008).
    Article Google Scholar
  9. Peterson, C. Deception in intimate relationships. Int. J. Psychol. 31, 279–288 (1996).
    Article Google Scholar
  10. DePaulo, B.M., Kashy, D.A., Kirkendol, S.E., Wyer, M.M. & Epstein, J.A. Lying in everyday life. J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 70, 979–995 (1996).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  11. Gamer, M., Rill, H.-G., Vossel, G. & Gödert, H.W. Psychophysiological and vocal measures in the detection of guilty knowledge. Int. J. Psychophysiol. 60, 76–87 (2006).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  12. Abe, N., Suzuki, M., Mori, E., Itoh, M. & Fujii, T. Deceiving others: distinct neural responses of the prefrontal cortex and amygdala in simple fabrication and deception with social interactions. J. Cogn. Neurosci. 19, 287–295 (2007).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  13. Schachter, S. & Latané, B. Crime, cognition, and the autonomic nervous system. In Nebr. Symp. Motiv. 12 (ed. Levine, D.) 221–275 (1964).
  14. Breiter, H.C. et al. Response and habituation of the human amygdala during visual processing of facial expression. Neuron 17, 875–887 (1996).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  15. Ishai, A., Pessoa, L., Bikle, P.C. & Ungerleider, L.G. Repetition suppression of faces is modulated by emotion. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 101, 9827–9832 (2004).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  16. Denny, B.T. et al. Insula-amygdala functional connectivity is correlated with habituation to repeated negative images. Soc. Cogn. Affect. Neurosci. 9, 1660–1667 (2014).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  17. Yarkoni, T., Poldrack, R.A., Nichols, T.E., Van Essen, D.C. & Wager, T.D. Large-scale automated synthesis of human functional neuroimaging data. Nat. Methods 8, 665–670 (2011).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  18. Lane, R.D. et al. Neuroanatomical correlates of pleasant and unpleasant emotion. Neuropsychologia 35, 1437–1444 (1997).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  19. Zald, D.H. & Pardo, J.V. Emotion, olfaction, and the human amygdala: amygdala activation during aversive olfactory stimulation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94, 4119–4124 (1997).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  20. Schneider, F. et al. Differential amygdala activation in schizophrenia during sadness. Schizophr. Res. 34, 133–142 (1998).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  21. Ketter, T.A. et al. Anterior paralimbic mediation of procaine-induced emotional and psychosensory experiences. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 53, 59–69 (1996).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  22. Irwin, W. et al. Human amygdala activation detected with echo-planar functional magnetic resonance imaging. Neuroreport 7, 1765–1769 (1996).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  23. Ledoux, J. The Emotional Brain: the Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life (Simon & Schuster, 1998).
  24. Cain, D.M., Loewenstein, G. & Moore, D.A. The dirt on coming clean: perverse effects of disclosing conflicts of interest. J. Legal Stud. 34, 1–25 (2005).
    Article Google Scholar
  25. Costa, V.D., Lang, P.J., Sabatinelli, D., Versace, F. & Bradley, M.M. Emotional imagery: assessing pleasure and arousal in the brain's reward circuitry. Hum. Brain Mapp. 31, 1446–1457 (2010).
    Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  26. Knutson, B., Adams, C.M., Fong, G.W. & Hommer, D. Anticipation of increasing monetary reward selectively recruits nucleus accumbens. J. Neurosci. 21, RC159 (2001).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  27. MacDonald, A.W. III, Cohen, J.D., Stenger, V.A. & Carter, C.S. Dissociating the role of the dorsolateral prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex in cognitive control. Science 288, 1835–1838 (2000).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  28. Miller, E.K. & Cohen, J.D. An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function. Annu. Rev. Neurosci. 24, 167–202 (2001).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  29. Greene, J.D. & Paxton, J.M. Patterns of neural activity associated with honest and dishonest moral decisions. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 106, 12506–12511 (2009).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  30. Zhu, L. et al. Damage to dorsolateral prefrontal cortex affects tradeoffs between honesty and self-interest. Nat. Neurosci. 17, 1319–1321 (2014).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  31. Langleben, D.D. et al. Telling truth from lie in individual subjects with fast event-related fMRI. Hum. Brain Mapp. 26, 262–272 (2005).
    Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  32. Mohamed, F.B. et al. Brain mapping of deception and truth telling about an ecologically valid situation: functional MR imaging and polygraph investigation–initial experience. Radiology 238, 679–688 (2006).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  33. Chang, L.J., Gianaros, P.J., Manuck, S.B., Krishnan, A. & Wager, T.D. A sensitive and specific neural signature for picture-induced negative affect. PLoS Biol. 13, e1002180 (2015).
    Article PubMed PubMed Central CAS Google Scholar
  34. Winnett, R. & Rayner, G. No Expenses Spared (Bantam Press, 2009).
  35. Welsh, D.T., Ordóñez, L.D., Snyder, D.G. & Christian, M.S. The slippery slope: how small ethical transgressions pave the way for larger future transgressions. J. Appl. Psychol. 100, 114–127 (2015).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  36. Schrand, C.M. & Zechman, S.L.C. Executive overconfidence and the slippery slope to financial misreporting. J. Account. Econ. 53, 311–329 (2012).
    Article Google Scholar
  37. LeDoux, J.E. Emotion circuits in the brain. Annu. Rev. Neurosci. 23, 155–184 (2000).
    Article CAS PubMed Google Scholar
  38. Phelps, E.A. Emotion and cognition: insights from studies of the human amygdala. Annu. Rev. Psychol. 57, 27–53 (2006).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  39. Poldrack, R.A. Can cognitive processes be inferred from neuroimaging data? Trends Cogn. Sci. 10, 59–63 (2006).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  40. Shenhav, A. & Greene, J.D. Integrative moral judgment: dissociating the roles of the amygdala and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. J. Neurosci. 34, 4741–4749 (2014).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  41. Wu, D., Loke, I.C., Xu, F. & Lee, K. Neural correlates of evaluations of lying and truth-telling in different social contexts. Brain Res. 1389, 115–124 (2011).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  42. Mazar, N., Amir, O. & Ariely, D. The dishonesty of honest people: a theory of self-concept maintenance. J. Mark. Res. 45, 633–644 (2008).
    Article Google Scholar
  43. Effron, D.A., Bryan, C.J. & Murnighan, J.K. Cheating at the end to avoid regret. J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 109, 395–414 (2015).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  44. Eickhoff, S.B. et al. A new SPM toolbox for combining probabilistic cytoarchitectonic maps and functional imaging data. Neuroimage 25, 1325–1335 (2005).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  45. Eickhoff, S.B., Heim, S., Zilles, K. & Amunts, K. Testing anatomically specified hypotheses in functional imaging using cytoarchitectonic maps. Neuroimage 32, 570–582 (2006).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  46. Charpentier, C.J., Moutsiana, C., Garrett, N. & Sharot, T. The brain's temporal dynamics from a collective decision to individual action. J. Neurosci. 34, 5816–5823 (2014).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  47. Edelson, M.G., Dudai, Y., Dolan, R.J. & Sharot, T. Brain substrates of recovery from misleading influence. J. Neurosci. 34, 7744–7753 (2014).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  48. Drueke, B. et al. Neural correlates of positive and negative performance feedback in younger and older adults. Behav. Brain Funct. 11, 17 (2015).
    Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar
  49. Maldjian, J.A., Laurienti, P.J., Kraft, R.A. & Burdette, J.H. An automated method for neuroanatomic and cytoarchitectonic atlas-based interrogation of fMRI data sets. Neuroimage 19, 1233–1239 (2003).
    Article PubMed Google Scholar
  50. Slavich, G.M., Way, B.M., Eisenberger, N.I. & Taylor, S.E. Neural sensitivity to social rejection is associated with inflammatory responses to social stress. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 107, 14817–14822 (2010).
    Article CAS PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar

Download references