心理科学 ›› 2024, Vol. 47 ›› Issue (2): 384-392.DOI: 10.16719/j.cnki.1671-6981.20240216

• 社会、人格与管理 • 上一篇    下一篇

从经济领域到社会领域:决策中的不确定性*

薛靖华1, 朱睿达**2, 刘超**1   

  1. 1北京师范大学认知神经科学与学习国家重点实验室暨IDG/麦戈文脑科学研究院, 北京,100875;
    2中山大学心理学系,广州,510006
  • 出版日期:2024-03-20 发布日期:2024-02-29
  • 通讯作者: **朱睿达,E-mail: zhurd3@mail.sysu.edu.cn;刘超,E-mail: liuchao@bnu.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    *本研究得到国家自然科学基金(32200884,32271092)和国家社会科学基金重大项目(19ZDA363)的资助

From the Economic Domain to the Social Domain: Uncertainty in Decision-Making

Xue Jinghua1, Zhu Ruida2, Liu Chao1   

  1. 1State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning & IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, 100875;
    2Department of Psychology, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, 510006
  • Online:2024-03-20 Published:2024-02-29

摘要: 不确定性指个体根据已有信息进行预测的精确程度。文章梳理了来源于经济领域和社会领域的不确定性研究,发现不确定性普遍引发个体的消极情绪。通过剖析两个领域的不确定性对心理和行为的影响路径,发现经济决策中的不确定性首先引发注意和记忆的认知资源变化,促进个体采取灵活的学习策略,随后影响对奖惩的评估。社会决策中的不确定性首先影响针对他人的预测推断,进而影响人际互动策略,随后影响对互动结果的社会学习。最后针对过往研究存在的不足,提出未来值得研究的方向。

关键词: 不确定性, 经济领域, 社会领域, 风险厌恶, 模糊厌恶, 神经机制

Abstract: Due to the limitation of information and environmental factors, uncertainty widely exists in various kinds of decision-making. Uncertainty refers to the degree of precision with which individuals can make predictions based on available information. In the economic domain, uncertainty revolves around probabilistic information regarding monetary gains or losses and investigates individuals' choices in the face of uncertain financial outcomes. While research on uncertainty in the economic domain is well-established, recent efforts have focused on understanding uncertainty in the social domain. Social interactions often involve numerous uncertain decisions due to challenges in understanding others' intentions and behaviors. Social uncertainty reflects the degree to which individuals' uncertainty about their own future states and actions is influenced by uncertainty about others' states and actions. Uncertainty in both the economic and social domains presents distinct categories of challenges that humans encounter and endeavor to resolve. The "social brain" hypothesis posits that individuals may employ different cognitive and neural mechanisms when processing social information in contrast to non-social information. Hence, it is crucial to investigate the shared and distinctive psychological and neural mechanisms individuals employ when confronted with uncertainty in these separate domains.
This paper will first introduce the fundamental theory of uncertainty research, which categorizes uncertainty into risk uncertainty and ambiguity uncertainty based on the availability of existing information. Risk uncertainty involves explicit probabilities associated with potential outcomes, whereas ambiguity uncertainty involves unknown probabilities associated with potential outcomes. Additionally, important models such as the Subjective Expected Utility Model and the Max-min Expected Utility Model help quantify individuals' cognitive processes in response to uncertainty, with the latter effectively distinguishing and quantifying individuals' attitudes towards risk and ambiguity. Subsequently, this paper will expound upon the shared impacts of uncertainty in the economic and social domains on emotional responses. Faced with uncertainty, individuals tend to exhibit a degree of aversion and often seek to avoid or reduce uncertainty. Furthermore, uncertainty aversion has been correlated with activation in the anterior insula. The distinct influence of uncertainty in the economic and social domains on individual psychology and behavior will be discussed, along with the underlying cognitive and neural mechanisms. Through comparing and analyzing the differences between uncertainty in the economic domain and the social domain, it shows that social uncertainty encompasses broader and more complex sources compared to the economic domain. Uncertainty in economic decision-making initially triggers changes in attention and cognitive resources, and facilitates the adoption of corresponding learning mechanisms and behavioral strategies. Ultimately, it influences the evaluation of economic outcomes in terms of rewards and punishments. Conversely, uncertainty in social decision-making affects the initial assessments of others, subsequently influencing interaction strategies, and involving feedback and social learning derived from the outcomes of social interactions.
Regarding the differences in the impact pathways of uncertainty within these two domains, we further integrate them into three stages: the initial stage, the action stage, and the feedback stage. Overall, individuals exhibit distinct cognitive strategies and behavioral patterns across these three stages of economic and social decision-making under the influence of uncertainty, which supports the "social brain" hypothesis to some extent. Individuals aim to reduce uncertainty to make future states and outcomes more predictable. But the specific goals and execution processes differ between the economic and social domains. The "social brain" hypothesis contributes to a better understanding of the differences in the impact of uncertainty in these two domains.
In conclusion, this paper summarizes the limitations of the current study and provides some recommendations for future research. Future research should explore the differential impact of risk and ambiguity attitudes, examine the benefits of uncertainty and related neural mechanisms, draw insights from classical paradigms and models within the economic domain to study uncertainty within the social domain, and investigate the transferability and generalizability of uncertainty effects between the economic and social domains.

Key words: uncertainty, economic domain, social domain, risk aversion, ambiguity aversion, neural mechanism