Skip to main content

Secondary menu

User menu

  • Join
  • OR
  • Log In

MNN - Mother Nature Network

Sunday, May 19, 2013
SPECIAL FEATURES:
  • Leaderboard
  • Nest
  • TreeHugger
  • Photos
  • Blogs
  • SB 2013
  • Joy of Less

Search form

Social links

Main menu

  • Earth Matters
    • Browse all »
    • Animals
    • Weather
    • Energy
    • Politics
    • Space
    • Translating Uncle Sam
    • Wilderness & Resources
  • Health
    • Browse all »
    • Allergies
    • Fitness & Well-Being
    • Healthy Spaces
  • Lifestyle
    • Browse all »
    • Arts & Culture
    • Travel
    • Natural Beauty & Fashion
    • Recycling
    • Responsible Living
  • Green Tech
    • Browse all »
    • Computers
    • Gadgets & Electronics
    • Research & Innovations
    • Transportation
  • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Browse all »
    • Green Workplace
    • Personal Finance
    • Sustainable Business Practices
  • Food & Drink
    • Browse all »
    • Beverages
    • Healthy Eating
    • Recipes
  • Your Home
    • Browse all »
    • At Home
    • Organic Farming & Gardening
    • Remodeling & Design
  • Family
    • Browse all »
    • Babies & Pregnancy
    • Family Activities
    • Pets
    • Protection & Safety

Breadcrumb Navigation

MNN.COM › Green Tech › Research & Innovations
    x
  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Bookmark and ShareShare
  • Earn Points
    What's this?
Brain cells that feed on altruism discovered
People feel a difference between doing good for themselves and then for others, raising the question of how the brain encodes the behaviors.

By

Tia Ghose, LiveScience
Fri, Dec 28 2012 at 3:15 PM

Related Topics:

Research & Innovation, Science

Photo: jinterwas/Flickr

Brain cells that fire only when monkeys act unselfishly may provide clues to the neural basis of altruism, according to a new study.
 
In the study, the cells fire in rhesus monkeys when they gave juice away, but not when they received it. The findings, published Dec. 23 in the journal Nature Neuroscience, may shed light on why many animals (including humans) exhibit kind, unselfish behavior that doesn't directly benefit them.
 
The new findings provide a "complete picture of the neuronal activity underlying a key aspect of social cognition," Matthew Rushworth, a neuroscientist at Oxford who was not involved in the study, wrote in an email."It is definitely a major achievement."
 
Do-gooder impulse
Why animals act unselfishly has been a longstanding mystery. Yet they routinely do: Monkeys will go without food rather than shock compatriots, and mice will also starve rather than hurt friends.
 
This primitive do-gooder impulse in animals may have evolved into the altruism we see in humans today, said study co-author Michael Platt, a neuroscientist at Duke University.
 
But understanding how altruism works in the brain has been trickier. When people do something unselfish such as give to charity, reward circuits that usually fire when eating chocolate or doing something pleasurable are activated, Platt told LiveScience.
 
Clearly, though, people feel a difference between doing good for themselves and being kind to others. That raised the question of how the brain encodes unselfish, other-oriented acts separate from personal gain.
 
Playing for juice
To find out, Platt and his colleagues taught rhesus monkeys to play a simple computer game where they looked at different shapes to either give themselves, a nearby neighbor monkey, or nobody a squirt of juice.
 
Unsurprisingly, monkeys almost always give themselves juice when they have the option.
 
After teaching the monkeys the rules of the game, the researchers set up another trial where they could either give the other monkey juice or give it nothing. None of the choices led to a tasty juice squirt for the actor monkey. [Image Gallery: Cute Gelada Monkeys]
 
During the trials, electrodes in the monkey's brain recorded the electrical firing from neurons in brain regions suspected of playing a role in altruism.
 
Helper monkeys
The monkeys consistently preferred doling out juice to other monkeys over giving nothing. When the researchers replaced the second monkey with another bottle of juice, the monkeys showed no preference for dispensing juice, showing that they were motivated by the reward to the other monkey.
 
A brain region called the orbitofrontal cortex, which is known to play a role in reward processing, fired when monkeys got juice squirts for themselves.
 
"The orbitofrontal cortex seems to be all about your personal reward. It's egocentric," Platt said.
 
Intriguingly, however, some neurons in a region called the anterior cingulate gyrus fired when the monkey got its own juice, while others fired when monkeys gave their neighbors juice.
 
That same brain region has been implicated in other social processes. For instance, a person's anterior cingulate gyrus fires when he watches his romantic partner get pinched, for instance, Platt said.
 
While it's not clear exactly what's going on in the monkeys' brains, the results suggest that this brain region may be partly responsible for creating primitive forms of empathy.
 
Platt speculates that this region may operate similarly in humans and may encode vicarious experiences when others are happy or sad.
 
"That vicarious experience and reward is perhaps what actually drives giving behavior and perhaps drives charity in people," he said.
 
Follow LiveScience on Twitter@livescience. We're also on Facebook &Google+. 
 
Related on LiveScience:
  • 8 Humanlike Behaviors of Primates
  • 7 Ways Animals Are Like Humans
  • Top 10 Mysteries of the Mind
 
This story was originally written for LiveScience and was republished with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

You might also like:

Join the conversation

Sign in with one of these accounts to add your comment.
Log in or
create an account
  • Sign in using this account:

EDITORS' PICKS

tease kids in woods

line

tease stargazing

line

tease hand

Advertisement

TODAY'S MOST POPULAR ON

  1. 20 ways to reuse coffee grounds, tea leaves
  2. 13 natural remedies for the ant invasion
  3. 15 famous people who mysteriously disappeared
  4. How much money do you save when baking your own bread?
  5. 9 habits that may do more harm than good
  6. 15 houseplants to improve indoor air quality
  7. Jon Stewart explains the ‘Monsanto Protection Act’
  8. Best air-filtering houseplants, according to NASA
  9. 10 false facts most people think are true
  10. How one family is living off the grid
+ Add this to my site
From our sponsor
Civic Accelerator: A Platform for Social Entrepreneurship
A competition between 10 finalists, the program offers seed money for enterprises that inspire, more...
Reinventing the meeting
AltruHelp addresses 5 reasons millennials don't volunteer
The online social platform aims to boost flagging volunteer rates among this generation by making more...
Reinventing the meeting
BOULD housing project creates green ‘learning laboratories’
A Denver-based civic venture constructs high-quality green housing for low-income families while more...
Reinventing the meeting
Students use CareerVillage to get advice from real professionals
Young people from low-income communities submit career questions via the website and get answers more...
Reinventing the meeting
Generation Citizen strengthens democracy by empowering youth
Program partners college students with high schools to challenge the younger students to find more...
Reinventing the meeting

NEWSLETTER

Mother Nature. Delivered
Advertisement
Advertisement

Footer menu

  • Quick Links
    • Joy of Less
    • About Us
    • Advisory Board
    • Editors' Blog
    • Press
    • Privacy
    • Sitemap
    • Terms of Service
  • MNN Tools
    • Advice
    • Blogs
    • Day in History
    • Eco-glossary
    • Infographics
    • Lists
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Connect
    • The Nest
    • Contact Us
    • Mixed Greens
    • Newsletters
    • RSS
    • Social
    • TreeHugger
    • Mobile
  • Channels
    • Earth Matters
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Green Tech
    • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Your Home
    • Family
    • State Reports
  • Follow MNN
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Tumblr
    • Google+
    • StumbleUpon

Copyright © 2013 MNN Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Website by GLICK INTERACTIVE | Powered by CIRRACORE

SPONSORS