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The Social Cognitive Neuroscience of Organizations Volume 1118 published November 2007
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1118: 43–73 (2007). doi: 10.1196/annals.1412.007
Copyright © 2007 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by CALDÚ, X.
Articles by DREHER, J.-C.
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Original Articles

Hormonal and Genetic Influences on Processing Reward and Social Information

XAVIER CALDÚa AND JEAN-CLAUDE DREHERa

a Cognitive Neuroscience Center, Reward and Decision-Making Group, National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), UMR 5229, Lyon, France

Key Words: fMRI • reward system • dopamine • social interaction • genes • COMT • DAT • gonadal steroid hormones • estrogen • progesterone • oxytocin • reward uncertainty • neuroeconomy • cooperation • competition • fairness • trust • social exclusion

Address for correspondence: Dr. Jean-Claude Dreher, CNRS UMR 5229, Reward and Decision-Making Team, Cognitive Neuroscience Center, 67 Bd Pinel, 69675 Bron, France. Voice: 00 33 (0)4 37 91 12 38; fax: 00 33 (0)4 37 91 12 10.  dreher{at}isc.cnrs.fr

Social neuroscience is an emerging interdisciplinary field that combines tools from cognitive, cellular, and molecular neuroscience to understand the neural mechanisms underlying human interactions, emphasizing the complementary nature of different organization levels in the social and biological domains. Previous studies focused on the molecular/neuronal substrates of a variety of complex behaviors, such as parental behavior and pair bonding. Less is known about the various factors influencing interindividual differences in reward processing and decision making in social contexts, both relying upon the dopaminergic system. This review concerns (1) basic electrophysiological findings and recent neuroimaging findings showing that reward processing and social interaction processes share common neural substrates and (2) genetic and hormonal influences on these processes. Recent research combining molecular genetics, endocrinology, and neuroimaging demonstrated that variations in dopamine-related genes and in hormone levels affect the physiological properties of the dopaminergic system in nonhuman primates and modulate the processing of reward and social information in humans. These findings are important because they indicate the neural influence of genes conferring vulnerability to develop neuropathologies such as drug addiction and pathological gambling. Taken together, the reviewed data start to unveil the relationships between genes, hormones, and the functioning of the reward system, as well as decision making in social contexts, and provide a link between molecular, cellular, and social cognitive levels in humans.






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