Dialogues in Philosophy
Mental and Neuro Sciences

Dialogues in Philosophy, Mental and Neuro Sciences

The official journal of Crossing Dialogues
Volume 8, Issue 1 (June 2015)

ORIGINAL ARTICLES
 

The Neural Basis of Always Looking on the Bright Side

 
Owen P. O’Sullivan
 
Humans generally exhibit a pervasive future bias in favour of optimism. We overestimate the likelihood of success in work, relationships and financial investments. Similarly, we underestimate the probability of experiencing negative events such as, serious illness or financial ruin.
The optimism bias is widely considered as one of the most reproducible, prevalent and robust cognitive biases observed in psychology and behavioural economics. The catastrophic impact of the recent economic collapse has laid this cognitive bias bare.
In this introductory overview, current understanding of the neural basis of the optimism bias is explored. Topics considered include: converse negative biases in depressive illnesses, the role of dopamine in optimism bias generation and modulation and evidence from functional neuroimaging studies.
Research on the optimism bias has afforded us a unique window into decision-making, reward-processing and the potential for systematic irrationality in the human mind.
 
Keywords:
Cognitive science, Anticipation, Psychological, Humans, fMRI, Habituation, Psychophysiologic
 
Dial Phil Ment Neuro Sci 2015; 8(1): 11-15
 
Received on October 13, 2014
Accepted on May 26, 2015
Firstly published online on June 23, 2015