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DOI: 10.1093/scan/nss002
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

Emotion regulation reduces loss aversion and decreases amygdala responses to losses

Peter Sokol‐Hessner,Colin F. Camerer,Elizabeth A. Phelps

Amygdala
Psychology
Loss aversion
2012
Emotion regulation strategies can alter behavioral and physiological responses to emotional stimuli and the neural correlates of those responses in regions such as the amygdala or striatum. The current study investigates the brain systems engaged when using an emotion regulation technique during financial decisions. In decision making, regulating emotion with reappraisal-focused strategies that encourage taking a different perspective has been shown to reduce loss aversion as observed both in choices and in the relative arousal responses to actual loss and gain outcomes. In the current study, we find using fMRI that behavioral loss aversion correlates with amygdala activity in response to losses relative to gains. Success in regulating loss aversion also correlates with the reduction in amygdala responses to losses but not to gains. Furthermore, across both decisions and outcomes, we find the reappraisal strategy increases baseline activity in dorsolateral and ventromedial prefrontal cortex and the striatum. The similarity of the neural circuitry observed to that seen in emotion regulation, despite divergent tasks, serves as further evidence for a role of emotion in decision making, and for the power of reappraisal to change assessments of value and thereby choices.
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    Emotion regulation reduces loss aversion and decreases amygdala responses to losses” is a paper by Peter Sokol‐Hessner Colin F. Camerer Elizabeth A. Phelps published in 2012. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.