AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent advancements in understanding social conformity have utilized neuroscience and innovative experimental methods, showcasing neural reinforcement-learning's role in conformity adjustments.
  • Despite criticisms regarding potential biases in a widely used experimental paradigm, this study confirms that social influence affects behavior and provides a method to accurately measure these effects at both group and individual levels.
  • The research supports the validity of previous findings on the brain mechanisms of social conformity while proposing correction procedures to address statistical distortions in behavioral effects.

Article Abstract

Our understanding of the mechanisms underlying social conformity has recently advanced due to the employment of neuroscience methodology and novel experimental approaches. Most prominently, several studies have demonstrated the role of neural reinforcement-learning processes in conformal adjustments using a specifically designed and frequently replicated paradigm. Only very recently, the validity of the critical behavioral effect in this very paradigm was seriously questioned, as it invites the unwanted contribution of regression toward the mean. Using a straightforward control-group design, we corroborate this recent finding and demonstrate the involvement of statistical distortions. Additionally, however, we provide conclusive evidence that the paradigm nevertheless captures behavioral effects that can only be attributed to social influence. Finally, we present a mathematical approach that allows to isolate and quantify the paradigm's true conformity effect both at the group level and for each individual participant. These data as well as relevant theoretical considerations suggest that the groundbreaking findings regarding the brain mechanisms of social conformity that were obtained with this recently criticized paradigm were indeed valid. Moreover, we support earlier suggestions that distorted behavioral effects can be rectified by means of appropriate correction procedures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4440903PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00669DOI Listing

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