RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Humans Use Future Thinking to Exert Social Control JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 737353 DO 10.1101/737353 A1 Soojung Na A1 Dongil Chung A1 Andreas Hula A1 Jennifer Jung A1 Vincenzo G. Fiore A1 Peter Dayan A1 Xiaosi Gu YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/08/16/737353.abstract AB Social controllability, the ability to exert control over others, is critical in social interactions yet uninvestigated. Here, we used functional neuroimaging and a social exchange paradigm in which people’s current choices either did, or did not, influence their partners’ proposals in the future. Computational modeling revealed that participants used future-oriented thinking and calculated the downstream effects of their current actions regardless of the controllability of the social environment. Furthermore, greater levels of estimated control correlated with better performance in controllable interactions and less illusory beliefs about control in uncontrollable interactions. Neural instantiation of trial-by-trial values of social controllability were tracked in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), striatum, and insula for controllable interactions, but only in vmPFC for uncontrollable interactions. These findings demonstrate that humans use future-oriented thinking, a strategy similar to model-based planning, to guide social choices; and that subjective beliefs about social controllability might not be grounded in reality.