Impaired perception of unintentional transgression of social norms after prefrontal cortex damage: Relationship to decision making, emotion recognition, and executive …

R Ouerchefani, N Ouerchefani… - Archives of Clinical …, 2022 - academic.oup.com
R Ouerchefani, N Ouerchefani, MR Ben Rejeb, D Le Gall
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 2022academic.oup.com
Objective Patients with prefrontal cortex damage often transgress social rules and show
lower accuracy in identifying and explaining inappropriate social behavior. The objective of
this study was to examine the relationship between the ability to perceive other unintentional
transgressions of social norms and both decision making and emotion recognition as these
abilities are critical for appropriate social behavior. Method We examined a group of patients
with focal prefrontal cortex damage (N= 28) and a group of matched control participants (N …
Objective
Patients with prefrontal cortex damage often transgress social rules and show lower accuracy in identifying and explaining inappropriate social behavior. The objective of this study was to examine the relationship between the ability to perceive other unintentional transgressions of social norms and both decision making and emotion recognition as these abilities are critical for appropriate social behavior.
Method
We examined a group of patients with focal prefrontal cortex damage (N = 28) and a group of matched control participants (N = 28) for their abilities to detect unintentional transgression of social norms using the “Faux-Pas” task of theory of mind, to make advantageous decisions on the Iowa gambling task, and to recognize basic emotions on the Ekman facial affect test.
Results
The group of patients with frontal lobe damage was impaired in all of these tasks compared with control participants. Moreover, all the “Faux-Pas”, Iowa gambling, and emotion recognition tasks were significantly associated and predicted by executive measures of inhibition, flexibility, or planning. However, only measures from the Iowa gambling task were associated and predicted performance on the “Faux-Pas” task. These tasks were not associated with performance in recognition of basic emotions. These findings suggest that theory of mind, executive functions, and decision-making abilities act in an interdependent way for appropriate social behavior. However, theory of mind and emotion recognition seem to have distinct but additive effects upon social behavior. Results from VLSM analysis also corroborate these data by showing a partially overlapped prefrontal circuitry underlying these cognitive domains.
Oxford University Press
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