Abstract
Extensive research explains how pre-frontal cortical areas process explicit rewards, and how pre-motor and motor cortices are recipients of that processing to energize motor behaviour. However, the specifics of motor behaviour, decisions between actions and brain dynamics when driven by no explicit reward, remain poorly understood. Are patterns of decision and motor control altered wen performing under social pressure? Are the same brain regions that typically process explicit rewards also involved in this expression of motivation? To answer these questions, we designed a novel task of decision-making between precision reaches and manipulated motivation by means of social pressure, defined by the presence or absence of virtual partner of a higher/lower aiming skill than our participants. We assessed the overall influence of this manipulation by analysing movements, decisions, pupil dilation and electro-encephalography. We show that the presence of a partner consistently increased aiming accuracy along with pupil diameter, furthermore the more skilled the partner. Remarkably, increased accuracy is attained by faster movements, consistently with a vigour effect that breaches speed-accuracy trade-offs typical of motor adaptation. This implicated an ensemble of cortical sources including pre-frontal areas, concerned with the processing of reward, but also pre-motor and occipital sources, consistent with the nature of the task. Overall, these results strongly suggest the role of social pressure as a motivational drive, enabling an increase of both vigour and accuracy in a non-trivial fashion.