• Title of article

    Brain Regions Activity During a Deceitful Monetary Game: An fMRI Study

  • Author/Authors

    Ahmadzade ، Haady Tehran University of Medical Sciences, International Campus (TUMS- IC) , Batouli ، Amir Hossein Department of Neuroscience and Addiction Studies - School of Advanced Technologies in Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Oghabian ، Mohammad Ali Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering Department - Research Center for Science and Technology in Medicine (RCSTIM) - Tehran University of Medical Sciences

  • From page
    1
  • To page
    11
  • Abstract
    Finding neural correlates underlying deception may have implementations in judicial, security, and financial settings. Telling a successful liemayactivate different brain regions associated with risk evaluation, subsequent reward/punishment possibility, decisionmaking, and theory of mind (ToM). Many other protocols have been developed to study individuals who proceed with deception under instructed laboratory conditions. However, no protocol has practiced lying in a real-life environment. We performed a functional MRI using a 3Tesla machine on 31 healthy individuals to detect the participants who successfully lie in a previously-designed game to earn or lose the monetary reward. The results revealed that lying results in an augmented activity in the right dorsolateral and right dorsomedial prefrontal cortices, the right inferior parietal lobule, bilateral inferior frontal gyri, and right anterior cingulate cortex. The findings would contribute to forensic practices regarding the detection of a deliberate lie. They may also have implications for guilt detection, social cognition, and the societal notions of responsibility.
  • Keywords
    Lie , Deliberate Deception Detection , Brain Imaging , Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) , Neural Activity
  • Journal title
    Archives of Neuroscience
  • Journal title
    Archives of Neuroscience
  • Record number

    2725199