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We examined the following contrasts (unfair rejected vs fair accepted), (unfair accepted vs fair accepted) and (unfair rejected vs unfair accepted) and their interactions with neuroticism.
Second, brain regions were identified for the contrast (unfair accepted vs fair accepted).
No significant results were observed for the reverse contrast (unfair rejected > fair accepted).
The following contrasts were computed per subject on first level: (proposal unfair vs proposal fair), (decision unfair rejected vs decision fair accepted) and (decision unfair accepted vs decision fair accepted).
To correct for multiple comparisons, resulting brain images were thresholded at p <.05 FWE First, brain regions were identified for the contrast (unfair rejected vs fair accepted).
For the reverse contrast (fair accepted > unfair accepted), we found higher activation in the inferior/superior parietal gyrus, precuneus, occipital gyrus, inferior/middle temporal gyrus, fusiform gyrus, insula, hippocampus and caudate (see Table 4 for the results).
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Furthermore, we found more activation in parietal and temporal regions for the two most common decisions (fair accept and unfair reject), involving areas related to perceptual decision-making.
Furthermore, we found more activation in parietal and temporal regions for the two most common decisions (fair accept and unfair reject), involving areas related to perceptual decision-making (Heekeren, Marrett, & Ungerleider, 2008; Keuken et al., 2014).
For the two most common decisions (fair accept and unfair reject), we found more activation in several parietal, temporal and occipital brain regions as well as the insula, hippocampus and caudate.
It's not fair to just accept money off of other people to fund something you want to do".
Instead of just accepting a "fair and balanced" presentation where both sides have a say no matter how ridiculous one side is, the media must challenge false facts and narratives with real information.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com