The endowment effect can extend from self to mother: Evidence from an fMRI study

People typically demand more to part with goods they own than they would be willing to pay to acquire identical goods they do not own, a phenomenon known as the endowment effect [1-3]. Recently, a large body of behavioral research has suggested that the endowment effect may actually be a type of self-referent cognitive bias resulting from ownership of an object. However, the neural underpinnings of this effect are not well understood. In the present study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to explore whether brain activity can predict the extensibility of the endowment effect to items owned by another individual with a close relationship to the subject. Subjects were asked to decide whether to buy or sell their own or their mothers' possessions at various prices. Behavioral results showed an endowment effect not only for goods owned by the subjects, but also for goods owned by the subjects' mothers, providing evidence for the extensibility of the endowment effect. Neuroimaging data showed activation in the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) and insula in both ownership conditions. Also, MPFC activation was positively correlated with the behavioral indifference point in the sell-for-self and sell-for-mother conditions. Furthermore, psychophysiological interaction (PPI) analysis revealed that MPFC activation was accompanied by increased functional integration with insula and striatum. Together, these findings suggest that MPFC may play an important role in the extensibility of the endowment effect.

[1]  G. Glover,et al.  Reflecting upon Feelings: An fMRI Study of Neural Systems Supporting the Attribution of Emotion to Self and Other , 2004, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[2]  Carey K. Morewedge,et al.  Bad riddance or good rubbish? Ownership and not loss aversion causes the endowment effect. , 2009 .

[3]  A. Aron,et al.  Close Relationships as Including Other in the Self , 1991 .

[4]  A. Craig How do you feel? Interoception: the sense of the physiological condition of the body , 2002, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[5]  T. Robbins,et al.  Differential effects of insular and ventromedial prefrontal cortex lesions on risky decision-making , 2008, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[6]  James K. Beggan On the social nature of nonsocial perception: The mere ownership effect. , 1992 .

[7]  C. N. Macrae,et al.  Finding the Self? An Event-Related fMRI Study , 2002, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[8]  Brian Knutson,et al.  A region of mesial prefrontal cortex tracks monetarily rewarding outcomes: characterization with rapid event-related fMRI , 2003, NeuroImage.

[9]  Koji Inui,et al.  Inner experience of pain: imagination of pain while viewing images showing painful events forms subjective pain representation in human brain. , 2006, Cerebral cortex.

[10]  N. Tzourio-Mazoyer,et al.  Automated Anatomical Labeling of Activations in SPM Using a Macroscopic Anatomical Parcellation of the MNI MRI Single-Subject Brain , 2002, NeuroImage.

[11]  G. Loewenstein,et al.  Neural Predictors of Purchases , 2007, Neuron.

[12]  Matthew D. Lieberman,et al.  Evidence-based and intuition-based self-knowledge: an FMRI study. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[13]  G. Elliott Wimmer,et al.  Neural Antecedents of the Endowment Effect , 2008, Neuron.

[14]  Mary Catherine Mareno,et al.  Endowment Effects in Chimpanzees , 2007, Current Biology.

[15]  H. Critchley,et al.  Neural Activity in the Human Brain Relating to Uncertainty and Arousal during Anticipation , 2001, Neuron.

[16]  H. Critchley,et al.  A common role of insula in feelings, empathy and uncertainty , 2009, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[17]  J. Knetsch,et al.  Willingness to Pay and Compensation Demanded: Experimental Evidence of an Unexpected Disparity in Measures of Value , 1984 .

[18]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Human Brain Function , 1997 .

[19]  Jonathon D. Brown,et al.  Truth and Consequences: The Costs and Benefits of Accurate Self-Knowledge , 1995 .

[20]  Drazen Prelec,et al.  The Red and the Black: Mental Accounting of Savings and Debt , 1998 .

[21]  G. Winocur,et al.  In Search of the Self: A Positron Emission Tomography Study , 1999 .

[22]  Wendi L. Adair,et al.  For Whom Is Parting With Possessions More Painful? , 2010, Psychological science.

[23]  R. Belk Possessions and the Extended Self , 1988 .

[24]  Cheryl L. Grady,et al.  Distributed self in episodic memory: neural correlates of successful retrieval of self-encoded positive and negative personality traits , 2004, NeuroImage.

[25]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Psychophysiological and Modulatory Interactions in Neuroimaging , 1997, NeuroImage.

[26]  M. Zeelenberg,et al.  Buying and selling exchange goods: Outcome information, curiosity and the endowment effect , 2005 .

[27]  David Rudrauf,et al.  Medial PFC Damage Abolishes the Self-reference Effect , 2012, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[28]  Jean-Luc Anton,et al.  Region of interest analysis using an SPM toolbox , 2010 .

[29]  Sterling C. Johnson,et al.  Neural correlates of self-reflection. , 2002, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[30]  G. Bodenhausen,et al.  I like it, because I like myself: Associative self-anchoring and post-decisional change of implicit evaluations , 2007 .

[31]  J. Allman,et al.  The Anterior Cingulate Cortex , 2001, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[32]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Anomalies: The Endowment Effect, Loss Aversion, and Status Quo Bias , 1991 .

[33]  Shinobu Kitayama,et al.  On the cultural guises of cognitive dissonance: the case of easterners and westerners. , 2005, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[34]  Jin Fan,et al.  Neural basis of cultural influence on self-representation , 2007, NeuroImage.

[35]  D. Kumaran,et al.  The Neurobiology of Reference-Dependent Value Computation , 2009, NeuroImage.

[36]  Jane F. Banfield,et al.  Medial prefrontal activity predicts memory for self. , 2004, Cerebral cortex.

[37]  R. Thaler Toward a positive theory of consumer choice , 1980 .

[38]  A. Aron,et al.  Relationship Closeness as Including Other in the Self: Cognitive Underpinnings and Measures , 1999 .

[39]  Jun Shinozaki,et al.  The neural correlates of endowment effect without economic transaction , 2010, Neuroscience Research.

[40]  Daniel Kahneman,et al.  Anomalies: The Endowment Effect, Loss Aversion, and Status Quo Bias , 1991 .

[41]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Statistical parametric maps in functional imaging: A general linear approach , 1994 .

[42]  D. Kahneman,et al.  Experimental Tests of the Endowment Effect and the Coase Theorem , 1990, Journal of Political Economy.