SCIENCE
What Happens When the Brain's Social Compass Fails?
Tue Apr 15 2025
The amygdala is a small part of the brain that plays a big role in how people interact with others. Specifically, the basolateral amygdala (BLA) is thought to help figure out how close or distant someone feels to another person. This is important for deciding how generous to be. But does the BLA actually control how kind people are to others? Researchers wanted to find out.
To test this, they looked at five people with Urbach-Wiethe disease (UWD). These individuals have damage only to their BLA. The researchers compared their behavior to that of 16 healthy people. All participants played a modified dictator game. In this game, they picked eight people from their lives and ranked them from closest to most distant. Then, they decided how much money to share with each person based on how close or distant they felt.
The results showed that people with UWD were less generous overall. They also showed a steeper social discounting. This means they were less willing to share as the social distance increased. In other words, they were less kind to people they felt were farther away from them emotionally. This wasn't because they lacked empathy or had different personalities. It was because their BLA was damaged.
So, what does this mean? It suggests that the BLA helps balance selfish and altruistic motives. When the BLA is damaged, people struggle more with this balance. They might act more selfishly because they can't calibrate their kindness based on social-emotional distance. This finding is important because it shows how the BLA is crucial for social cognition. It helps people decide how to act based on their relationship with others. But it also raises questions. For example, can people with BLA damage learn to be more generous? And if so, how? These are questions for future research.
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questions
If the BLA controls social distance in giving, do people with BLA damage give their Christmas gifts to random strangers?
How does the basolateral amygdala (BLA) specifically influence the decision-making process in prosocial behaviors?
What other brain regions might compensate for the lack of BLA function in individuals with Urbach-Wiethe disease?
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