How your Brain Act on Money?
Money has the power to stir
emotions and create drama fitting for a Shakespearean play. A raise in your
salary gives you joy, but misery comes if you gamble your money away. You don't
mind risk taking because it paves the way to future success, but you're
panic-stricken when you lose money invested in stocks.
Then there is greed, one of
the seven deadly sins in early Christian writings and the subject of a painting
-- "The Seven Deadly Sins and the Four Last Things" -- that depicts
greed as misers being boiled in a pot of gold.
What role
does your brain play in the pursuit and handling of money?
Your brain wants you to be safe
and alive, so it makes you go after basic human needs like food, shelter, love
and the safety of a social group, i.e., family. But when you want to make money
-- which often involves risk taking and calculating probabilities -- your brain
doesn't necessarily feel safe.
Our brains are cravers: chocolate, ice cream and even alcohol. The brain doesn't want to bother with futuristic, "maybe" rewards. But the wise and smart parts of our brain will say: "Hold on, wait a minute, let's reassess" before we make a decision.
This momentary, alternative
thinking helps us resist making impulsive financial choices that feel good
during a shopping spree, but not in the long term.
Money,
Joy, and Pain
The power of choice is within us
when it comes to handling money in ways that won't cause pain.
Brian Knutson, a neuroscientist,
studies the brain as it relates to money. Knutson uses special MRI images in
his experiments while people are handling money. One thing he's found is that
when cash is offered to someone, dopamine is released in the nucleus accumbens, a part of the brain that is
involved in reward and addiction.
So, money can make you happy
quickly. But Knutson's research -- published in Neuron in 2007 -- also showed
that losing cash can cause pain.
When people were in the midst of
deciding to purchase some items, the emotional parts of the brain were
activated. When the product was anticipated and desired, the nucleus accumbens
(involving dopamine release) was activated.
But when the thought of financial
loss was entertained (because of excessive prices), a part of the brain called
the insula was activated. The insula
typically "lights up" in people who feel or anticipate pain.
What is fascinating is that these
areas have anticipatory effects that precede the decision to purchase. Consider
this thought: "If I buy this lovely yet pricey perfume bottle, what would
I have to give up in the future because of the money I am about to spend and
lose?" Such thinking makes you go through imaginary checks and balances,
pleasures and pains, before you open your wallet to the world.
What Knutson's research means for
people in practical terms is that competing parts of your brain are at play
when you make purchasing decisions. There's the pleasure-seeking part, and the
part that wants to avoid pain.
If you can take a moment to contemplate
the pain of being part with your money, you might be less inclined to take
risks or make big purchases.
Savers and
Spenders
The neurology of a shopping spree
tells us that the brains of people who spend frivolously are wired differently
than those who hold on to that last penny. Most people get pleasure out of
owning the newest iPhone or going on a Caribbean cruise.
"Hell-with-tomorrow" is in operation here.
But savers and spenders have
different traits that are independent of intelligence or rationality.
If you are a saver, you are better
than your spender friend is at picturing what "not saving" looks or
feels like. In other words, you have a sense of yourself in the future that is
different from the picture of your current self. Therefore, you are better able
to see that you might regret spending your money.
This is describing by the
"future self-continuity" hypothesis. In one experiment whose results
published in the journal Judgment and Decision Making in June 2009, people
who rated higher on the future self-continuity index had a greater lifetime
accumulation of financial assets regardless of age or education.
The take-home message is
"Don't stop thinking about tomorrow." Develop a sense of a
future-self if you want to accumulate wealth.
Fear-Based
Choices
Fear and peer pressure also play a
part in how people invest their money.
During stock market crashes, for example, many investors have reacted by selling off their shares -- a reaction based on fear rather than a thought-out choice based on long-term planning.
During stock market crashes, for example, many investors have reacted by selling off their shares -- a reaction based on fear rather than a thought-out choice based on long-term planning.
Deep in our brain sit two
amygdales, a tiny collection of cells that get activated when we're afraid.
This can presumably keep you safe, giving you a momentary rush of panic that
alerts you to run from an approaching tiger. However, it can also prompt you to
dump your investments in a panic.
Peer pressure also plays a role.
When all the investors are selling, there is peer pressure to sell—even though
the decision might not be wisest. Gregory Burns, a neuroscientist, found that
"standing alone" versus "conformity to the group" triggered
the brain's amygdales and caudate, areas typically activated during physical or
emotional pain.
Therefore, it is less painful to
go along with the herd and be part of a group of investors. Humans find comfort
in making group decisions rather than on-my-own type decisions.
Poorly
Served By Greed
Neuroeconomics and neuromarketing
are emerging and exciting fields. However, they do not explain the spirit
behind deep human emotions and experiences such as exhilaration, disappointment
or greed. At the end, we all know that greed and addiction serve us little, and
self-reliance and honesty are assets that are honorable and worthy.
Perhaps awareness in our
relationship with money can open our eyes to self-growth and wisdom. We can all
take a little advice from William Shakespeare: "Love all, trust a few, do
wrong to none."
By Dr. Maha Alattar
Posted by doshti.com
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