Universiteit Leiden

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PhD defence

Preferences and Beliefs in Behavior and the Brain

  • A. Farina
Date
Wednesday 10 January 2024
Time
Location
Academy Building
Rapenburg 73
2311 GJ Leiden

A short summary

Despite decades of research from psychology, anthropology, biology and economics, how social preferences arise and vary across contexts remains an open question.

In three empirical chapters, this dissertation addresses this gap using a variety of economic games and neuroimaging techniques that allow for a tractable modeling of cooperation and competition.  

Overall, findings suggest that while social preferences are linked to neural structure, they can also adapt to environmental factors as well as beliefs about interaction partners.

This doctoral thesis shows that interacting with ingroup or outgroup members, taking decisions publicly or privately, and knowing whether we may interact with others again affect our cooperative behavior.

These results highlight the importance of understanding how prosociality may be altered and lay the foundations for policy makers to further those social environments that encourage prosocial behavior.

Supervisor(s)

  • Prof.dr. C.K.W. de Dreu
  • dr. J. Gross

PhD dissertations

Approximately one week after the defence, PhD dissertations by Leiden PhD students are available digitally through the Leiden Repository, that offers free access to these PhD dissertations. Please note that in some cases a dissertation may be under embargo temporarily and access to its full-text version will only be granted later.

Press enquiries (journalists only)

+31 (0)71 527 1521
+31 (0) 6 2857 6982
nieuws@leidenuniv.nl

General information

Beadle's Office
pedel@bb.leidenuniv.nl
+31 71 527 7211

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