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When helping is risky: behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms of prosocial decisions entailing risk

Abstract:
Helping others can entail risks for the helper. For example, when treating infectious patients, medical volunteers risk their own health. In such situations, helping-decisions should depend on the individual’s valuation of others’ well-being (social preferences) and the degree of personal risk the individual finds acceptable (risk preferences). We investigate how these distinct preferences are psychologically and neurobiologically integrated when helping is risky. We used incentivized decision-making tasks (Study 1, N=292, mean age=22.3±3.7, 142 female) and manipulated dopamine and norepinephrine levels in the brain by administering methylphenidate, atomoxetine, or placebo (Study 2, N=154, mean age=23.7±3.9, 77 female). We find that social and risk preferences are independent drivers of risky helping. Methylphenidate increased risky helping by selectively altering risk- rather than social preferences. Atomoxetine influenced neither risk nor social preferences and did not affect risky helping. This suggests that methylphenidate-altered dopamine concentrations affect helping decisions that entail a risk to the helper.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Not peer reviewed

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Preprint server copy:
10.31234/osf.io/n4wqd

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Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-1805-9399


Preprint server:
PsyArXiv
Publication date:
2020-03-14
DOI:


Language:
English
Pubs id:
1096797
Local pid:
pubs:1096797
Deposit date:
2020-06-16
ARK identifier:

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