Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2015.00338
Title: Dopamine D4 receptor gene and religious affiliation correlate with dictator game altruism in males and not females: Evidence for gender-sensitive gene ? culture interaction
Authors: Jiang Y.
Bachner-Melman R.
Chew S.H. 
Ebstein R.P. 
Keywords: dopamine 4 receptor
adult
altruism
Article
Buddhist
Christian
classification
controlled study
cultural anthropology
decision making
environment
exon
female
game
genotype
Han Chinese
human
human experiment
male
normal human
receptor gene
religion
sample size
self report
undergraduate student
variable number of tandem repeat
Issue Date: 2015
Citation: Jiang Y., Bachner-Melman R., Chew S.H., Ebstein R.P. (2015). Dopamine D4 receptor gene and religious affiliation correlate with dictator game altruism in males and not females: Evidence for gender-sensitive gene ? culture interaction. Frontiers in Neuroscience 9 (SEP) : 338. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2015.00338
Abstract: On a large sample of 2288 Han Chinese undergraduates, we investigated how religion and DRD4 are related to human altruistic giving behavior as measured with the Andreoni-Miller Dictator Game. This game enables us to clearly specify (non-)selfishness, efficiency, and fairness motives for sharing. Participants were further classified into religious categories (Christian, Buddhist-Tao, and No Religion) based on self-reports, and genotyped for the dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene exon III VNTR. Our analysis revealed a significant interaction between religion and DRD4 correlated with giving behavior solely among males: Whereas no significant association between religion and sharing decisions was observed in the majority 4R/4R genotype group, a significant difference in giving behavior between Christian and non-Christian males was seen in the non-4R/4R group, with Christian men being overall more altruistic (less selfish and fairer) than non-Christian men. These results support the vantage sensitivity hypothesis regarding DRD4 that the non-4R/4R "susceptibility" genotype is more responsive to a positive environment provided by some religions. © 2015 Jiang, Bachner-Melman, Chew and Ebstein.
Source Title: Frontiers in Neuroscience
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/174643
ISSN: 1662-4548
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00338
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