To explain investing decisions, financial theorists invoke two opposing metrics: expected reward and risk. Recent advances in the spatial and temporal resolution of brain imaging techniques enable investigators to visualize changes in neural activation before financial decisions. Research using these methods indicates that although the ventral striatum plays a role in representation of expected reward, the insula may play a more prominent role in the representation of expected risk. Accumulating evidence also suggests that antecedent neural activation in these regions can be used to predict upcoming financial decisions. These findings have implications for predicting choices and for building a physiologically constrained theory of decision-making. Copyright © 2007 Society for Neuroscience.
Carl Petersen, Sylvain Crochet, Yanqi Liu, Parviz Ghaderi, Mauro Pulin, Anthony Pierre Robert Renard, Christos Sourmpis, Pol Bech Vilaseca, Meriam Malekzadeh, Robin François Virginien Dard
Maria del Carmen Sandi Perez, Bernard Schneider, Jocelin Grosse, Olivia Zanoletti, Simone Astori, Elias Georges Gebara, Marie-Isabelle Guillot de Suduiraut, Alessandro Chioino, Sriparna Ghosal, Eva Ramos Fernandez