Abnormalities of brain function during a nonverbal theory of mind task in schizophrenia

E Brunet, Y Sarfati, MC Hardy-Baylé, J Decety - Neuropsychologia, 2003 - Elsevier
E Brunet, Y Sarfati, MC Hardy-Baylé, J Decety
Neuropsychologia, 2003Elsevier
Theory of mind (ToM), the specific ability to attribute thoughts and feelings to oneself and
others is generally impaired in schizophrenia. Previous studies demonstrated a deficit of the
attribution of intentions to others among patients having formal thought disorder. During
nonverbal tasks, such a function requires both the visual perception of human figures and
the understanding of their intentions. These processes are considered to involve the
superior temporal sulcus and the medial prefrontal cortex, respectively. Are the functional …
Theory of mind (ToM), the specific ability to attribute thoughts and feelings to oneself and others is generally impaired in schizophrenia. Previous studies demonstrated a deficit of the attribution of intentions to others among patients having formal thought disorder. During nonverbal tasks, such a function requires both the visual perception of human figures and the understanding of their intentions. These processes are considered to involve the superior temporal sulcus and the medial prefrontal cortex, respectively. Are the functional patterns of activation associated with those processes abnormal in schizophrenia? Seven schizophrenic patients on medication performed a nonverbal attribution of intentions task as well as two matched physical logic tasks, with and without human figures, while H2O15 PET-scanning was performed. Data from the patients were compared to those of eight healthy controls matched for verbal IQ and sex. The experimental design allowed dissociating the effect of the perception of human figures from that of the attribution of intentions. During attribution of intentions, significant activations in the right prefrontal cortex were detected in the control subjects. Those activations were not found in the schizophrenic group. However, in both groups, the perception of human figure elicited bilateral activation of the occipitotemporal regions and of the posterior part of the superior temporal sulcus. Schizophrenic patients performing a nonverbal attribution of intentions task have an abnormal cerebral activity.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果