AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how social comparison affects memory for faces during interpersonal interactions, especially focusing on gains and losses in a monetary game.
  • It found that when participants experienced monetary losses, they had more negative brain response patterns to faces associated with other players' gains, implying a heightened emotional reaction.
  • Ultimately, participants recognized those faces better when they had lost money, indicating that feelings of disadvantage in social context enhance memory for faces of those compared to them.

Article Abstract

In daily life, faces are often memorized within contexts involving interpersonal interactions. However, little is known about whether interpersonal interaction-related contexts influence face memory. The present study aimed to understand this question by investigating how social comparison-related context affects face encoding and recognition. To address this issue, 40 participants were informed that they and another player each played a monetary game and were then presented with both of their outcomes (either monetary gain or loss). Subsequently, participants were shown the face of the player whom they were just paired with. After all the faces had been encoded, participants were asked to perform a sudden old/new recognition task involving these faces. The results showed that, during the encoding phase, another player's monetary gain, compared to loss, resulted in more negative responses in the N170 and early posterior negativity (EPN)/N250 to relevant players' faces when participants encountered monetary loss and a smaller late positive potential (LPP) response irrespective of self-related outcomes. In the subsequent recognition phase, preceding another player's monetary gain as compared to loss led to better recognition performance and stronger EPN/N250 and LPP responses to the faces of relevant players when participants had lost some amount of money. These findings suggest that the social comparison-related context, particularly self-disadvantageous outcomes in the context, influences the memory of comparators' faces.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120538DOI Listing

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