Abstract
Social identity, the part of the self-concept derived from group membership, is a key explanatory construct for a wide variety of behaviors, ranging from organizational commitment to discrimination toward out-groups. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we examined the neural basis of social identity through a comparison with the neural correlates of self-face perception. Participants viewed a series of pictures, one at a time, of themselves, a familiar other, in-group members, and out-group members. We created a contrast for self-face perception by subtracting brain activation in response to the familiar other from brain activation in response to the self face, and a contrast for social identity by subtracting brain activation in response to out-group faces from brain activation in response to in-group faces. In line with previous research, for the self-familiar other contrast we found activation in several right-hemisphere regions (inferior frontal gyrus, inferior and superior parietal lobules). In addition, we found activation in closely-adjacent brain areas for the social identity contrast. Importantly, significant clusters of activation in this in-group-out-group contrast only emerged to the extent that participants reported high identification with the in-group. These results suggest that self-perception and social identity depend on partly similar neural processes.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 528 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Frontiers in Human Neuroscience |
| Volume | 7 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 3 Sept 2013 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Funding
This research was made possible by grants awarded to Belle Derks and Sander Nieuwenhuis by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research. Mischa de Rover was supported by a Marie Curie European Re-integration Grant within the 7th European Community Framework Programme and a Starting Grant from the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition. The authors would like to thank Eveline Crone for her extremely helpful advice during several stages of this research. We thank Russell Spears for his comments on the manuscript. Finally, we thank Marlon Mooijman for his help with programming the study, and Cobus van der Poel, Elize Vlainic, and Floor van de Water for their assistance with data collection.
Keywords
- social identity
- functional neuroimaging
- self-perception
- group identification
- SOCIAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- GROUP IDENTIFICATION
- INGROUP IDENTIFICATION
- RIGHT-HEMISPHERE
- ELDERLY ADULTS
- RECOGNITION
- REPRESENTATIONS
- DISCRIMINATION
- OUTGROUP
- AMYGDALA