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  • A.C. Bilderbeck
    University of Oxford
  • G.D. Brown
    University of Warwick
  • J. Read
    University of Oxford
  • M. Woolrich
    University of Oxford
  • P.J. Cowen
    University of Oxford
  • T.E. Behrens
    University of Oxford
  • R. Rogers
How do people sustain resources for the benefit of individuals and communities and avoid the tragedy of the commons, in which shared resources become exhausted? In the present study, we examined the role of serotonin activity and social norms in the management of depletable resources. Healthy adults, alongside social partners, completed a multiplayer resource-dilemma game in which they repeatedly harvested from a partially replenishable monetary resource. Dietary tryptophan depletion, leading to reduced serotonin activity, was associated with aggressive harvesting strategies and disrupted use of the social norms given by distributions of other players’ harvests. Tryptophan-depleted participants more frequently exhausted the resource completely and also accumulated fewer rewards than participants who were not tryptophan depleted. Our findings show that rank-based social comparisons are crucial to the management of depletable resources, and that serotonin mediates responses to social norms.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1303-1313
JournalPsychological Science
Volume25
Issue number7
Early online date8 May 2014
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2014

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