An investigation of care-based vs. rule-based morality in frontotemporal dementia, Alzheimer's disease, and healthy controls
Autor: | Pongsatorn Paholpak, Elvira E. Jimenez, Paul M. Thompson, Sylvia S. Fong, Andrew R. Carr, Mario F. Mendez, Madelaine Daianu, Michelle Mather |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Male
Cognitive Neuroscience Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Moral reasoning Neuropsychological Tests Morals Severity of Illness Index Article Temporal lobe Developmental psychology Behavioral Neuroscience Mental Processes Alzheimer Disease medicine Humans Dementia Neuropsychology Brain Organ Size Middle Aged medicine.disease Magnetic Resonance Imaging humanities Frontal lobe Frontotemporal Dementia Female Orbitofrontal cortex Alzheimer's disease Psychology Frontotemporal dementia |
Zdroj: | Neuropsychologia. 78:73-79 |
ISSN: | 0028-3932 |
Popis: | Behavioral changes in dementia, especially behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), may result in alterations in moral reasoning. Investigators have not clarified whether these alterations reflect differential impairment of care-based vs. rule-based moral behavior. This study investigated 18 bvFTD patients, 22 early onset Alzheimer’s disease (eAD) patients, and 20 healthy age-matched controls on care-based and rule-based items from the Moral Behavioral Inventory and the Social Norms Questionnaire, neuropsychological measures, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) regions of interest. There were significant group differences with the bvFTD patients rating care-based morality transgressions less severely than the eAD group and rule-based moral behavioral transgressions more severely than controls. Across groups, higher care-based morality ratings correlated with phonemic fluency on neuropsychological tests, whereas higher rule-based morality ratings correlated with increased difficulty set-shifting and learning new rules to tasks. On neuroimaging, severe care-based reasoning correlated with cortical volume in right anterior temporal lobe, and rule-based reasoning correlated with decreased cortical volume in the right orbitofrontal cortex. Together, these findings suggest that frontotemporal disease decreases care-based morality and facilitates rule-based morality possibly from disturbed contextual abstraction and set-shifting. Future research can examine whether frontal lobe disorders and bvFTD result in a shift from empathic morality to the strong adherence to conventional rules. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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