Differences in Male and Female Brain Activity When it Comes to Cooperation

Summary: A new study may provide clues as to how cooperative behavior could have evolved differently between men and women.

Source: Stanford.

When the researchers asked people to cooperate with a partner, then tracked the brain activity of both participants, they found that males and females had different patterns of shared brain activity.

Studies have long shown that when faced with a problem that must be solved by cooperating with others, males and females approach the task differently. Now, researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered how those differences are reflected in brain activity.

When the researchers asked people to cooperate with a partner and then tracked the brain activity of both participants, they found that males and females had different patterns of brain activity.

The new findings, published online June 8 in Scientific Reports, could offer some clues into how cooperative behavior may have evolved differently between males and females, and could eventually help researchers develop new ways to enhance cooperative behavior.

“It’s not that either males or females are better at cooperating or can’t cooperate with each other,” said the study’s senior author, Allan Reiss, MD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and of radiology. “Rather, there’s just a difference in how they’re cooperating.”

Women vs. men

Cooperation — between family members, friends, coworkers and even governments around the world — is viewed as a cornerstone of human society. But not everyone cooperates equally, as anyone who’s worked on a group project knows. And one factor shaping a person’s approach to cooperation: sex. Previous behavioral studies have found that women cooperate more when they’re being watched by other women; that men tend to cooperate better in large groups; and that while a pair of men might cooperate better than a pair of women, in a mixed-sex pair the woman tends to be more cooperative.

Theories have circulated about why this is, but the brain science behind them has been scarce. “A vast majority of what we know comes from very sterile, single-person studies done in an MRI machine,” said Joseph Baker, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford and a lead author of the study. The other lead author is research associate Ning Liu, PhD.

Scanning pairs

To figure out how cooperation is reflected in the brains of men and women who are actively cooperating — rather than just thinking about cooperating while lying in a machine — the Stanford researchers turned to a technique called hyperscanning. Hyperscanning involves simultaneously recording the activity in two people’s brains while they interact. And instead of using an MRI that requires participants to lie perfectly still and flat, the scientists used near-infrared spectroscopy, or NIRS, in which probes are attached to a person’s head to record brain function, allowing them to sit upright and interact more naturally.

The 222 participants in the study were each assigned a partner. Pairs consisted of two males, two females or a male and a female. Then, while wearing the NIRS probes, each person sat in front a computer, across the table from their partner. Partners could see each other, but were instructed not to talk. Instead, they were asked to press a button when a circle on the computer screen changed color. The goal: to press the button simultaneously with their partner. After each try, the pair were told who had pressed the button sooner and how much sooner. They had 40 tries to get their timing as close as possible.

“We developed this test because it was simple, and you could easily record responses,” said Reiss. “You have to start somewhere.” It isn’t modeled after any particular real-world cooperative task, he said.

Sex influences both behavior and brain

On average, male-male pairs performed better than female-female pairs at timing their button pushes more closely, the researchers found. However, the brain activity in both same-sex pairs was highly synchronized during the activity, meaning they had high levels of “interbrain coherence.”

“Within same-sex pairs, increased coherence was correlated with better performance on the cooperation task,” Baker said., “However, the location of coherence differed between male-male and female-female pairs.”

Image shows a man undergoing the experiment.
Participants were sat on opposite sides of a square table, in front of individual monitors and keyboards. NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Reiss et al./Scientific Reports.

Surprisingly, though, male-female pairs did as well as male-male pairs at the cooperation task, even though they didn’t show coherence. Since the brains of males and females showed different patterns of activity during the exercise, more research might shed light on how sex-related differences in the brain inform cooperation strategy — at least when it comes to this particular type of cooperation.

An exploratory study

“This study is pretty exploratory,” Baker said. “This certainly isn’t probing cooperation in all its manifestations.” There could be other cooperative tasks, for instance, in which female-female pairs best males.

And the researchers noted they hadn’t measured activity in all parts of the brain. “There are a lot of parts of the brain we didn’t assess,” Reiss said, pointing out that interbrain coherence may have been present in other regions of the brain that weren’t examined during the task.

As they continue to study what in the brain underlies cooperation, the scientists’ results could help explain how cooperation evolved in humans — and whether cooperation was selected for differently in males and females — as well as inform methods that use biofeedback to teach cooperation skills.

“There are people with disorders like autism who have problems with social cognition,” said Baker. “We’re absolutely hoping to learn enough information so that we might be able to design more effective therapies for them.”

About this neurology research article

Other Stanford authors are research associate Xu Cui, PhD; former postdoctoral scholar Pascal Vrticka, PhD; and Manish Saggar, PhD, and Hadi Hosseni, PhD, both instructors in psychiatry and behavioral sciences.

Funding: The study was funded by the Albert Yu and Mary Bechmann foundation.

Stanford’s Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences also supported the work.

Source: Sarah C.P Williams – Stanford
Image Source: This NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Reiss et al./Scientific Reports.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Sex differences in neural and behavioral signatures of cooperation revealed by fNIRS hyperscanning” by Joseph M. Baker, Ning Liu, Xu Cui, Pascal Vrticka, Manish Saggar, S. M. Hadi Hosseini and Allan L. Reiss in Scientific Reports. Published online June 8 2016 doi:10.1038/srep26492

Cite This NeuroscienceNews.com Article

[cbtabs][cbtab title=”MLA”]Stanford. “Differences in Male and Female Brain Activity When it Comes to Cooperation.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 8 June 2016.
<https://neurosciencenews.com/sex-differences-cooperation-4406/>.[/cbtab][cbtab title=”APA”]Stanford. (2016, June 8). Differences in Male and Female Brain Activity When it Comes to Cooperation. NeuroscienceNews. Retrieved June 8, 2016 from https://neurosciencenews.com/sex-differences-cooperation-4406/[/cbtab][cbtab title=”Chicago”]Stanford. “Differences in Male and Female Brain Activity When it Comes to Cooperation.” https://neurosciencenews.com/sex-differences-cooperation-4406/ (accessed June 8, 2016).[/cbtab][/cbtabs]


Abstract

Sex differences in neural and behavioral signatures of cooperation revealed by fNIRS hyperscanning

Researchers from multiple fields have sought to understand how sex moderates human social behavior. While over 50 years of research has revealed differences in cooperation behavior of males and females, the underlying neural correlates of these sex differences have not been explained. A missing and fundamental element of this puzzle is an understanding of how the sex composition of an interacting dyad influences the brain and behavior during cooperation. Using fNIRS-based hyperscanning in 111 same- and mixed-sex dyads, we identified significant behavioral and neural sex-related differences in association with a computer-based cooperation task. Dyads containing at least one male demonstrated significantly higher behavioral performance than female/female dyads. Individual males and females showed significant activation in the right frontopolar and right inferior prefrontal cortices, although this activation was greater in females compared to males. Female/female dyad’s exhibited significant inter-brain coherence within the right temporal cortex, while significant coherence in male/male dyads occurred in the right inferior prefrontal cortex. Significant coherence was not observed in mixed-sex dyads. Finally, for same-sex dyads only, task-related inter-brain coherence was positively correlated with cooperation task performance. Our results highlight multiple important and previously undetected influences of sex on concurrent neural and behavioral signatures of cooperation.

“Sex differences in neural and behavioral signatures of cooperation revealed by fNIRS hyperscanning” by Joseph M. Baker, Ning Liu, Xu Cui, Pascal Vrticka, Manish Saggar, S. M. Hadi Hosseini and Allan L. Reiss in Scientific Reports. Published online June 8 2016 doi:10.1038/srep26492

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