Physiology, identity and behaviour: A neuropolitical perspective

Cram, Laura and Olivieri , Victor and Moore, Adam and Nicol, Katie and Roberts, Neil and Hong, Sujin (2016). Physiology, identity and behaviour: A neuropolitical perspective. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-852182

This transformative study explores the relationship between expressed or stated identities, 'what we say', and revealed or observed responses to identity triggers, 'what we do'. Hormonal testing and fMRI brain imaging are used to provide new insights into old questions about the nature of identity and its effects on public attitudes and behaviours.

The study begins from the starting point that identity matters. Political symbols play an important role in encouraging mass arousal and quiescence. The recent riots over the flying of the Union flag in Belfast highlight the potency of identity triggers. The role that identity will play in the forthcoming referenda in Scotland and Catalonia is heavily debated. The question of identity is also central to the ongoing debate about UK membership of the European Union. However, identity is complex and is not easily captured in standard surveys which ask, for example, how 'Scottish', 'Portuguese', 'Bavarian' or European an individual feels. Identity has an implicit as well as an explicit dimension. Using an innovative neuropolitics approach the project aims to enrich current understandings of identity and the role it plays in multi-level polities like the European Union.

Data description (abstract)

This data set contains 2 fMRI studies and a combined physiological hormone testing/behavioural game experiment. All three experiments examine the effect of national identity triggers on our behaviour in relation to those from our primary territorial in-group and to others from alternative territorial identity groupings.
i. fMRI study 1 is a pain-empathy study.
ii. fMRI study 2 uses a stag-hunt behavioural game in an fMRI environment.
ii. the hormone & behaviour study examines the physiological responses of participants while they take part in an ultimatum game.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Cram Laura University of Edinburgh
Olivieri Victor University of Edinburgh
Moore Adam University of Edinburgh
Nicol Katie University of Edinburgh
Roberts Neil University of Edinburgh
Hong Sujin University of Edinburgh
Contributors:
Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Keith Ewan University of Edinburgh
Sussenbach Felix University of Edinburgh
Sponsors: ESRC
Grant reference: ES/L003139/1
Topic classification: Politics
Society and culture
Psychology
Keywords: fMRI, physiological effects, neuropolitics, identity, behaviour
Project title: Physiology, Identity and Behaviour: A Neuropolitical Perspective
Grant holders: Laura Cram
Project dates:
FromTo
1 September 201328 February 2015
Date published: 29 Jan 2016 13:41
Last modified: 29 Jan 2016 13:42

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