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Social reasoning, emotion and empathy in frontotemporal dementia

Social reasoning, emotion and empathy in frontotemporal dementia
Social reasoning, emotion and empathy in frontotemporal dementia
Introduction: social cognition is crucial for human interaction, and is markedly impaired in the frontal variant of frontotemporal dementia (fvFTD). The relationship of various aspects of social functioning, however, remains controversial in this group.

Methods: patients with fvFTD (n = 18), and matched controls (n = 13), were tested using tasks designed to assess their Theory of Mind (ToM), moral reasoning, emotion recognition and executive function. Caregivers documented changes in empathy compared to premorbid functioning.

Results: we found marked impairments in the abilities of fvFTD patients, relative to controls, in ability to mentalise (ToM), which was evident on a cartoon test, but not on a story-based ToM task. Knowledge of social rules was intact, but moral reasoning was defective, and was due, in part, to an inability to rate the seriousness of moral and conventional transgressions appropriately. Executive function was impaired in this group, and compromised aspects of moral reasoning, but ToM performance was independent of this. Emotion recognition was globally impaired in fvFTD, but was particularly so for anger and disgust which may partly explain the difficulty these patients have with identifying social violations. Empathy, as rated by carers, was also shown to be abnormal.

Conclusion: it appears that social reasoning is disrupted in a number of ways in fvFTD, and the findings provide a basis for the understanding and further study of abnormal behaviour in this disease. The results are discussed in light of neuroimaging findings in studies of social cognition and the locus of pathology in fvFTD.
0028-3932
950-958
Lough, Sinclair
242434ae-0358-4561-8a3b-84c3273d3cbb
Kipps, Christopher M.
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
Treise, Cate
f16f9b0f-6632-444f-a845-07f20d443a94
Watson, Peter
6c8b1e44-51ef-4f63-b4b4-307cdfbe7aa6
Blair, James R.
5a0d33f1-cf93-40a1-81dc-b37301bd48c7
Hodges, John R.
c17af0a9-82e7-4f5a-8a97-d50ec06bbb0a
Lough, Sinclair
242434ae-0358-4561-8a3b-84c3273d3cbb
Kipps, Christopher M.
e43be016-2dc2-45e6-9a02-ab2a0e0208d5
Treise, Cate
f16f9b0f-6632-444f-a845-07f20d443a94
Watson, Peter
6c8b1e44-51ef-4f63-b4b4-307cdfbe7aa6
Blair, James R.
5a0d33f1-cf93-40a1-81dc-b37301bd48c7
Hodges, John R.
c17af0a9-82e7-4f5a-8a97-d50ec06bbb0a

Lough, Sinclair, Kipps, Christopher M., Treise, Cate, Watson, Peter, Blair, James R. and Hodges, John R. (2005) Social reasoning, emotion and empathy in frontotemporal dementia. Neuropsychologia, 44 (6), 950-958. (doi:10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2005.08.009).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: social cognition is crucial for human interaction, and is markedly impaired in the frontal variant of frontotemporal dementia (fvFTD). The relationship of various aspects of social functioning, however, remains controversial in this group.

Methods: patients with fvFTD (n = 18), and matched controls (n = 13), were tested using tasks designed to assess their Theory of Mind (ToM), moral reasoning, emotion recognition and executive function. Caregivers documented changes in empathy compared to premorbid functioning.

Results: we found marked impairments in the abilities of fvFTD patients, relative to controls, in ability to mentalise (ToM), which was evident on a cartoon test, but not on a story-based ToM task. Knowledge of social rules was intact, but moral reasoning was defective, and was due, in part, to an inability to rate the seriousness of moral and conventional transgressions appropriately. Executive function was impaired in this group, and compromised aspects of moral reasoning, but ToM performance was independent of this. Emotion recognition was globally impaired in fvFTD, but was particularly so for anger and disgust which may partly explain the difficulty these patients have with identifying social violations. Empathy, as rated by carers, was also shown to be abnormal.

Conclusion: it appears that social reasoning is disrupted in a number of ways in fvFTD, and the findings provide a basis for the understanding and further study of abnormal behaviour in this disease. The results are discussed in light of neuroimaging findings in studies of social cognition and the locus of pathology in fvFTD.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 August 2005
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 September 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489373
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489373
ISSN: 0028-3932
PURE UUID: cb57c994-e8df-4adb-b5e0-2640fe52428c
ORCID for Christopher M. Kipps: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5205-9712

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Date deposited: 23 Apr 2024 16:31
Last modified: 27 Apr 2024 02:03

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Contributors

Author: Sinclair Lough
Author: Christopher M. Kipps ORCID iD
Author: Cate Treise
Author: Peter Watson
Author: James R. Blair
Author: John R. Hodges

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