Neural correlates of ingroup bias for prosociality in rats

Author:

Ben-Ami Bartal Inbal1234ORCID,Breton Jocelyn M34ORCID,Sheng Huanjie3,Long Kimberly LP34,Chen Stella34ORCID,Halliday Aline3,Kenney Justin W5ORCID,Wheeler Anne L56,Frankland Paul567ORCID,Shilyansky Carrie8,Deisseroth Karl91011,Keltner Dacher412,Kaufer Daniela347ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

2. School of Psychological Sciences, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv, Israel

3. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, United States

4. Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, United States

5. The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Neuroscience and Mental Health Program, Toronto, Canada

6. Physiology Department, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

7. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, Canada

8. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

9. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

10. Department of Psychiatry, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

11. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

12. Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, United States

Abstract

Prosocial behavior, in particular helping others in need, occurs preferentially in response to distress of one’s own group members. In order to explore the neural mechanisms promoting mammalian helping behavior, a discovery-based approach was used here to identify brain-wide activity correlated with helping behavior in rats. Demonstrating social selectivity, rats helped others of their strain (‘ingroup’), but not rats of an unfamiliar strain (‘outgroup’), by releasing them from a restrainer. Analysis of brain-wide neural activity via quantification of the early-immediate gene c-Fos identified a shared network, including frontal and insular cortices, that was active in the helping test irrespective of group membership. In contrast, the striatum was selectively active for ingroup members, and activity in the nucleus accumbens, a central network hub, correlated with helping. In vivo calcium imaging showed accumbens activity when rats approached a trapped ingroup member, and retrograde tracing identified a subpopulation of accumbens-projecting cells that was correlated with helping. These findings demonstrate that motivation and reward networks are associated with helping an ingroup member and provide the first description of neural correlates of ingroup bias in rodents.

Funder

Adolph C. and Mary Sprague Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science, University of California Berkeley

CIFAR

Israel Science Foundation

Azrieli Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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