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      Medial Prefrontal Cortex Predicts Intertemporal Choice

      1 , 1 , 2 , 1
      Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
      MIT Press - Journals

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          Abstract

          People often make shortsighted decisions to receive small benefits in the present rather than large benefits in the future, that is, to favor their current selves over their future selves. In two studies using fMRI, we demonstrated that people make such decisions in part because they fail to engage in the same degree of self-referential processing when thinking about their future selves. When participants predicted how much they would enjoy an event in the future, they showed less activity in brain regions associated with introspective self-reference—such as the ventromedial pFC (vMPFC)—than when they predicted how much they would enjoy events in the present. Moreover, the magnitude of vMPFC reduction predicted the extent to which participants made shortsighted monetary decisions several weeks later. In light of recent findings that the vMPFC contributes to the ability to simulate future events from a first-person perspective, these data suggest that shortsighted decisions result in part from a failure to fully imagine the subjective experience of one's future self.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
          Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
          MIT Press - Journals
          0898-929X
          1530-8898
          April 2011
          April 2011
          : 23
          : 4
          : 857-866
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Harvard University
          [2 ]Princeton University
          Article
          10.1162/jocn.2010.21479
          20350058
          5e96ef9f-d953-4b74-b149-debf8364755e
          © 2011
          History

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