Integration of Intention and Outcome for Moral Judgment in Frontotemporal Dementia: Brain Structural Signatures
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2016Metadata
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Báez, Sandra
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Integration of Intention and Outcome for Moral Judgment in Frontotemporal Dementia: Brain Structural Signatures
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Background: Moral judgment has been proposed to rely on a distributed brain network. This function is impaired in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), a condition involving damage to some regions of this network. However, no studies have investigated moral judgment in bvFTD via structural neuroimaging. Methods: We compared the performance of 21 bvFTD patients and 19 controls on a moral judgment task involving scenarios that discriminate between the contributions of intentions and out-comes. Voxel-based morphometry was used to assess (a) the atrophy pattern in bvFTD patients, (b) associations between gray matter (GM) volume and moral judgments, and (c) structural differences between bvFTD subgroups (patients with relatively preserved moral judgment and patients with severer moral judgment impairments). Results: Patients judged attempted harm as more permissible and accidental harm as less permissible than controls. The groups' performance on accidental harm was associated with GM volume in the precuneus. In controls, it was also associated with the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC). Also, both groups' performance on attempted harm was associated with GM volume in the temporoparietal junction. Patients exhibiting worse performance displayed smaller GM volumes in the precuneus and temporal pole. Conclusions: Results suggest that moral judgment abnormalities in bvFTD are associated with impaired integration of intentions and outcomes, which depends on an extended brain network. In bvFTD, moral judgment seems to critically depend on areas beyond the VMPFC.
Patrocinador
CONICYT/FONDECYT Regular
1130920
1140114
1140423
Colciencias Project
120354531693
371-2011/345-2011
697-2014
CONICET
INECO Foundation
Associative Research Program of CONICYT
FB 0003
PICT 2012-0412
PICT 2012-1309
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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Neurodegener Dis 2016;16:206–217
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