AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how individuals detect when they deviate from social norms, which helps them adjust their behavior within a group.
  • Researchers suggest that the mediofrontal cortex is responsible for signaling these deviations, impacting how individuals conform to group norms.
  • Findings indicate that when participants strongly perceive deviance from a peer group's norms, they tend to pay less attention to that group's judgments in later tasks.

Article Abstract

The detection of one's deviance from social norms is an essential mechanism of individual adjustment to group behavior and, thus, for the perpetuation of norms within groups. It has been suggested that error signals in mediofrontal cortex provide the neural basis of such deviance detection, which contributes to later adjustment to the norm. In the present study, we used event-related potentials (ERPs) to demonstrate that, across participants, the strength of mediofrontal brain correlates of the detection of deviance from a peer group's norms was negatively related to attentive processing of the same group's judgments in a later task. We propose that an individual's perception of social deviance might bias basic cognitive processing during further interaction with the group. Strongly perceiving disagreement with a group could cause an individual to avoid or inhibit this group's judgments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17470919.2014.934393DOI Listing

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