University of Southern California
The amygdala -- the two almond-shaped areas hugging the center of the brain near the front -- tends to become active when people dig in their heels about a political belief. Credit: Photo/Courtesy of Brain and Creativity Institute at USC |
A USC-led study confirms what seems increasingly true in
American politics: People become more hard-headed in their political beliefs
when provided with contradictory evidence.
Neuroscientists at the Brain and Creativity Institute at USC
said the findings from the functional MRI study seem especially relevant to how
people responded to political news stories, fake or credible, throughout the
election.
"Political beliefs are like religious beliefs in the
respect that both are part of who you are and important for the social circle
to which you belong," said lead author Jonas Kaplan, an assistant research
professor of psychology at the Brain and Creativity Institute at USC Dornsife
College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.
"To consider an alternative view, you would have to consider
an alternative version of yourself."
To determine which brain networks respond when someone holds
firmly to a belief, the neuroscientists with the Brain and Creativity Institute
at USC compared whether and how much people change their minds on nonpolitical
and political issues when provided counter-evidence.
But when it came to reconsidering their political beliefs, such
as whether the United States should reduce funding for the military, they would
not budge.
"I was surprised that people would doubt that Einstein was
a great physicist, but this study showed that there are certain realms where we
retain flexibility in our beliefs," Kaplan said.
The study was published on Dec. 23 in the Nature journal, Scientific
Reports. Study co-authors were Sarah Gimbel of the Brain and Creativity
Institute and Sam Harris, a neuroscientist for the Los Angeles-based nonprofit
Project Reason.
Brain
response to belief challenges
For the study, the neuroscientists recruited 40 people who were
self-declared liberals. The scientists then examined through functional MRI how
their brains responded when their beliefs were challenged.
During their brain imaging sessions, participants were presented
with eight political statements that they had said they believe just as
strongly as a set of eight nonpolitical statements. They were then shown five
counter-claims that challenged each statement.
Participants rated the strength of their belief in the original
statement on a scale of 1-7 after reading each counter-claim. The scientists
then studied their brain scans to determine which areas became most engaged
during these challenges.
Participants did not change their beliefs much, if at all, when
provided with evidence that countered political statements such as, "The
laws regulating gun ownership in the United States should be made more
restrictive."
But the scientists noticed the strength of their beliefs
weakened by one or two points when challenged on nonpolitical topics, such as
whether "Thomas Edison had invented the light bulb." The participants
were shown counter statements that prompted some feelings of doubt, such as "Nearly
70 years before Edison, Humphrey Davy demonstrated an electric lamp to the
Royal Society."
The study found that people who were most resistant to changing
their beliefs had more activity in the amygdalae (a pair of almond-shaped areas
near the center of the brain) and the insular cortex, compared with people who
were more willing to change their minds.
"The activity in these areas, which are important for
emotion and decision-making, may relate to how we feel when we encounter
evidence against our beliefs," said Kaplan, a co-director of the Dornsife
Cognitive Neuroimaging Center at USC.
"The amygdala in particular is known to be especially
involved in perceiving threat and anxiety," Kaplan added. "The
insular cortex processes feelings from the body, and it is important for
detecting the emotional salience of stimuli. That is consistent with the idea
that when we feel threatened, anxious or emotional, then we are less likely to
change our minds."
Thoughts
that count
He also noted that a system in the brain, the Default Mode
Network, surged in activity when participants' political beliefs were
challenged.
"These areas of the brain have been linked to thinking
about who we are, and with the kind of rumination or deep thinking that takes
us away from the here and now," Kaplan said.
The researchers said that this latest study, along with one
conducted earlier this year, indicate the Default Mode Network is important for
high-level thinking about important personal beliefs or values.
"Understanding when and why people are likely to change
their minds is an urgent objective," said Gimbel, a research scientist at
the Brain and Creativity Institute. "Knowing how and which statements may
persuade people to change their political beliefs could be key for society's
progress," she said.
The findings can apply to circumstances outside of politics,
including how people respond to fake news stories.
"We should acknowledge that emotion plays a role in
cognition and in how we decide what is true and what is not true," Kaplan
said. "We should not expect to be dispassionate computers. We are
biological organisms."