TY - JOUR
T1 - Neural consequences of religious belief on self-referential processing
AU - Han, Shihui
AU - Mao, Lihua
AU - Gu, Xiaosi
AU - Zhu, Ying
AU - Ge, Jianqiao
AU - Ma, Yina
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence should be addressed to: Shihui Han, Department of Psychology, Peking University, 5 Yiheyuan Road, Beijing 100871, People’s Republic of China. E-mail: [email protected] This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (Project 30630025). We thank Glyn Humphreys, Sheng He, and Yi Jiang for their helpful comments on this paper.
PY - 2008/3
Y1 - 2008/3
N2 - Christianity strongly encourages its believers to surrender to God and to judge the self from God's perspective. We used functional MRI to assess whether this religious belief is associated with neural correlates of self-referential processing distinct from that of non-religious people. Non-religious and Christian participants were scanned while performing tasks of personal-trait judgments regarding the self or public persons. We found that, while self-judgment was linked to better memory of traits related to the self than to others, self-referential processing induced increased activity in the ventral medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) for non-religious participants but in the dorsal MPFC for Christian participants. In addition, the dorsal MPFC activity was positively correlated with the rating scores of the importance of Jesus' judgment in subjective evaluation of a person's personality. Because the ventral and dorsal MPFC are respectively engaged in representation of stimulus self-relevance and evaluation of self-referential stimuli, our findings suggest that Christian beliefs result in weakened neural coding of stimulus self-relatedness but enhanced neural activity underlying evaluative processes applied to self-referential stimuli.
AB - Christianity strongly encourages its believers to surrender to God and to judge the self from God's perspective. We used functional MRI to assess whether this religious belief is associated with neural correlates of self-referential processing distinct from that of non-religious people. Non-religious and Christian participants were scanned while performing tasks of personal-trait judgments regarding the self or public persons. We found that, while self-judgment was linked to better memory of traits related to the self than to others, self-referential processing induced increased activity in the ventral medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) for non-religious participants but in the dorsal MPFC for Christian participants. In addition, the dorsal MPFC activity was positively correlated with the rating scores of the importance of Jesus' judgment in subjective evaluation of a person's personality. Because the ventral and dorsal MPFC are respectively engaged in representation of stimulus self-relevance and evaluation of self-referential stimuli, our findings suggest that Christian beliefs result in weakened neural coding of stimulus self-relatedness but enhanced neural activity underlying evaluative processes applied to self-referential stimuli.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=39049096821&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17470910701469681
DO - 10.1080/17470910701469681
M3 - Article
C2 - 18633851
AN - SCOPUS:39049096821
SN - 1747-0919
VL - 3
SP - 1
EP - 15
JO - Social Neuroscience
JF - Social Neuroscience
IS - 1
ER -