Longitudinal neural and behavioral trajectories of charity contributions across adolescence
Publication date
2023-06
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Abstract
This study examined the development of prosocial charity donations and neural activity in the ventral striatum when gaining rewards for self and for charity. Participants 10-22 years (95% European heritage) participated in three annual behavioral-fMRI waves (T1: n = 160, T2: n = 167, T3: n = 175). Behaviorally, donations to charity as measured with an economic Dictator Game increased with age. Perspective taking also increased with age. In contrast, self-gain and charity-gain enjoyment decreased with age. Ventral striatum activity was higher for rewards for self than for charity, but this difference decreased during adolescence. Latent growth curve models revealed that higher donations were associated with a smaller difference between ventral striatum activation for self and charity. These findings show longitudinal brain-donations associations in adolescence.
Keywords
adolescence, fMRI, prosocial, Cultural Studies, Developmental and Educational Psychology, Behavioral Neuroscience, Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Citation
Spaans, J, Peters, S, Becht, A, van der Cruijsen, R, van de Groep, S & Crone, E A 2023, 'Longitudinal neural and behavioral trajectories of charity contributions across adolescence', Journal of Research on Adolescence, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 480-495. https://doi.org/10.1111/jora.12820