Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Neuroimaging

Brain scans reveal Democrats and Republicans use different neural pathways to buy groceries

by Karina Petrova
March 23, 2026
in Neuroimaging, Political Psychology
Brain MRI scans showing different views and slices for neurological and psychological research, highlighting brain structure and function analysis.

[Adobe Stock]

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

The way Republicans and Democrats think about everyday food purchases looks distinctly different on a brain scan, even when they end up buying the exact same groceries. This insight comes from a neuroimaging study published in the journal Politics and the Life Sciences, which revealed that people with different political affiliations rely on different neural pathways to make identical decisions. The researchers found they could accurately predict a person’s political party just by looking at their brain activity during a routine shopping task.

The study sits at the intersection of neuroscience and political behavior. Researchers in this field look at how political ideology corresponds to brain structure and internal processing. Past experiments have shown that liberals and conservatives exhibit different neural activity when faced with situations involving physical threats, risky financial bets, or disgusting images.

Those previous experiments generally used highly emotional or provocative triggers. The research team behind the new study wanted to see if political affiliation corresponds to different brain activity during ordinary decisions that lack obvious emotional weight. Choosing what to make for breakfast represents exactly this kind of mundane, everyday thinking.

Lead researchers Amanda S. Bruce, a pediatric behavioral scientist at the University of Kansas Medical Center, and Darren M. Schreiber, a political scientist at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom, designed the project. They wanted to understand if the mental processes underlying a routine food choice differ by political party. Biology provides a precedent for this idea, as animal studies show that completely different neural configurations can produce the exact same behavioral outcome.

The paper cites foundational neuroscience research on wild-caught crabs to explain this biological phenomenon. Scientists previously discovered that basic neural circuits in different crabs could look incredibly diverse but still produce identical stomach movements. In a laboratory setting with normal environments, the crabs behaved indistinguishably from one another. Only when the environment experienced extreme temperature changes did the behavioral outcomes begin to diverge.

The political researchers view the grocery task as the human equivalent of a stable laboratory temperature. A routine trip to the dairy aisle is not a high-stress political event, allowing Democrats and Republicans to reach the same behavioral conclusions. Yet the distinct neural wiring they use to get there might reveal hidden differences that only dictate behavior under the heat of severe partisan conflict.

To test this in humans, the researchers recruited healthy adults from the Kansas City metropolitan area. They identified the political affiliations of the participants through standard questionnaires. After excluding independent and unaffiliated voters to ensure a focus on clear partisans, the final sample included forty Democrats and twenty-five Republicans.

The participants were placed into a functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner. This machine uses strong magnetic fields to track blood flow in the brain as it happens. When a specific area of the brain works harder, it requires more oxygen, and the scanner detects these subtle changes in blood oxygenation to map neural activity.

Google News Preferences Add PsyPost to your preferred sources

While inside the scanner, the participants made real economic choices about buying groceries. The researchers provided each person with fifty dollars to spend. The participants knew they would actually purchase one of their chosen items to take home, with the cost directly deducted from their payment.

The team ran two separate experiments within the scanner. The first focused on buying a gallon of milk, while the second focused on buying a dozen eggs. The researchers chose these items because they are incredibly common staples, meaning most adult consumers already have established habits regarding them.

During the task, participants looked at a screen showing two different product images and had to pick one. The choices were divided into three specific conditions. In the price condition, the alternative food items were made using the exact same methods but offered at different price points.

In the production method condition, the prices were identical but the labels described different farming practices. For milk, the labels indicated whether the product came from a cloned cow, a cow treated with artificial growth hormones, or a cow raised without those technologies. For eggs, the labels indicated whether the hens were caged, confined, cage-free, or free-range.

In the combination condition, both the price and the production method varied at the same time. The researchers noted that this combination scenario most closely mimics a real trip to the grocery store. Participants had to weigh the trade-offs between cheaper prices and specialized farming practices.

When looking at the final choices the participants made, the researchers found no behavioral gap between the political parties. Democrats and Republicans bought the cloned milk, the growth-hormone milk, and the cage-free eggs at remarkably similar rates. Any differences in the actual food items selected were not statistically significant.

The brain scans presented a completely different picture. The thought processes driving these identical food choices relied on distinct areas of the brain depending on the shopper’s political identification. The researchers conducted a whole-brain analysis to pinpoint exactly where these differences occurred.

Among the Republican participants, the brain scans showed elevated activity in the left insula during the combination milk choices. The insula is a region often involved in interpreting internal body sensations and assigning subjective value to an item. The Republicans also showed heightened activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, a region linked to self-reflection and evaluating economic choices, when looking at milk production methods.

Among the Democratic participants, the brain scans showed elevated activity in the right precuneus and the right superior frontal gyrus during the combination egg choices. The precuneus is frequently associated with recalling personal memories and processing social information. The superior frontal gyrus acts as a gateway for directing attention and managing cognitive resources.

The researchers took these brain activation patterns and fed them into statistical models. They wanted to see if the neural data alone could accurately classify a participant as a Republican or a Democrat. The models performed exceptionally well, guessing a person’s political party correctly between seventy-six and ninety-four percent of the time.

In one specific model based entirely on brain activity during the egg combination choices, the system correctly identified the Democratic participants one hundred percent of the time. These classification rates are highly accurate compared to a random guess. They also outperform traditional predictive methods based simply on how conservative a person’s parents happen to be.

The researchers pointed out a few unexpected absences in the brain data. They did not see any differences in the amygdala, an emotion-processing center of the brain that has featured prominently in older studies of political ideology. The team suggested this is likely because choosing eggs or milk provides cognitive information but does not trigger the intense emotional reactions seen in experiments involving political faces or physical threats.

The study comes with a few caveats. By excluding independent and unaffiliated voters, the data only reflects the mental habits of firm partisans. Future studies will need to include unaligned voters to see if their brains respond to ordinary choices in a unique way or if they mirror one of the established parties.

The sample size of sixty-five participants is relatively small compared to national polling surveys. However, it is an acceptable number for neuroimaging research, which is notoriously expensive and time-consuming to conduct. The researchers also used strict statistical thresholds to ensure the brain activation differences were genuine.

The team hopes this research encourages a deeper look into the underlying mechanisms of political polarization. Focusing entirely on what people do might limit our understanding of why they do it. When different biological systems generate identical outcomes, identifying those unseen differences might explain why groups react so differently when political tensions eventually rise.

The study, “Differential brain activations between Democrats and Republicans when considering food purchases,” was authored by Amanda S. Bruce, John M. Crespi, Dermot J Hayes, Angelos Lagoudakis, Jayson L. Lusk, Darren M. Schreiber, and Qianrong Wu.

Previous Post

A parent’s mental health is linked to their teenager’s screen time and exercise habits

Next Post

Occasional use of classic psychedelics linked to enhanced cognitive flexibility in young adults

RELATED

Live music causes brain waves to synchronize more strongly with rhythm than recorded music
Cognitive Science

Soft brain implants outperform rigid silicon in long-term safety study

April 18, 2026
Live music causes brain waves to synchronize more strongly with rhythm than recorded music
Neuroimaging

Can choking during sex cause brain damage? Emerging evidence points to hidden neurological risks

April 18, 2026
Live music causes brain waves to synchronize more strongly with rhythm than recorded music
Political Psychology

New research finds a persistent and growing leftward tilt in the social sciences

April 18, 2026
Live music causes brain waves to synchronize more strongly with rhythm than recorded music
Cognitive Science

Live music causes brain waves to synchronize more strongly with rhythm than recorded music

April 18, 2026
Deep sleep emerges as potential shield against Alzheimer’s memory decline
Alzheimer's Disease

Scientists find evidence some Alzheimer’s symptoms may begin outside the brain

April 17, 2026
Sorting Hat research: What does your Hogwarts house say about your psychological makeup?
Cognitive Science

Maturing brain pathways explain the sudden leap in children’s language skills

April 17, 2026
Republican lawmakers lead the trend of using insults to chase media attention instead of policy wins
Political Psychology

Republican lawmakers lead the trend of using insults to chase media attention instead of policy wins

April 16, 2026
What we know about a person changes how our brain processes their face
Neuroimaging

More time spent on social media is linked to a thinner cerebral cortex in young adolescents

April 15, 2026

STAY CONNECTED

RSS Psychology of Selling

  • Why personalized ads sometimes backfire: A research review explains when tailoring messages works and when it doesn’t
  • The common advice to avoid high customer expectations may not be backed by evidence
  • Personality-matched persuasion works better, but mismatched messages can backfire
  • When happy customers and happy employees don’t add up: How investor signals have shifted in the social media age
  • Correcting fake news about brands does not backfire, five-study experiment finds

LATEST

Early exposure to forever chemicals linked to altered brain genes and impulsive behavior in rats

Soft brain implants outperform rigid silicon in long-term safety study

Disclosing autism to AI chatbots prompts overly cautious, stereotypical advice

Can choking during sex cause brain damage? Emerging evidence points to hidden neurological risks

The decline of hypergamy: How a surge in university degrees changed marriage in the US and France

New research finds a persistent and growing leftward tilt in the social sciences

How a year of regular exercise alters the biology of stress

Scientists tested the creativity of AI models, and the results were surprisingly homogeneous

PsyPost is a psychology and neuroscience news website dedicated to reporting the latest research on human behavior, cognition, and society. (READ MORE...)

  • Mental Health
  • Neuroimaging
  • Personality Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and conditions
  • Do not sell my personal information

(c) PsyPost Media Inc

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

(c) PsyPost Media Inc