4.7 Article

The interplay of emotional and social conceptual processes during moral reasoning in frontotemporal dementia

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 144, Issue 3, Pages 938-952

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awaa435

Keywords

behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia; Alzheimer's disease; social cognition; anterior temporal lobe; medial prefrontal cortex

Funding

  1. ForeFront
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) [1132524]
  3. Dementia Research Team Grant [1095127]
  4. Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders [CE11000102]
  5. NHMRC Postgraduate Scholarship [APP1132764]
  6. Faculty of Science Research Scholarship, The University of Sydney
  7. NHMRC Early Career Fellowship [APP1120770]
  8. NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship [APP1103258]
  9. ARC Future Fellowship [FT160100096]

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The study found that patients with bvFTD could make judgments on different courses of action in moral scenarios, but their emotional responses to these decisions were irregular. This blunted emotional reaction was specific to personal high-conflict conditions and was correlated with reduced knowledge of socially acceptable behavior.
Cooperative social behaviour in humans hinges upon our unique ability to make appropriate moral decisions in accordance with our ethical values. The complexity of the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying moral reasoning is revealed when this capacity breaks down. Patients with the behavioural variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) display striking moral transgressions in the context of atrophy to frontotemporal regions supporting affective and social conceptual processing. Developmental studies have highlighted the importance of social knowledge to moral decision making in children, yet the role of social knowledge in relation to moral reasoning impairments in neurodegeneration has largely been overlooked. Here, we sought to examine the role of affective and social conceptual processes in personal moral reasoning in bvFTD, and their relationship to the integrity and structural connectivity of frontotemporal brain regions. Personal moral reasoning across varying degrees of conflict was assessed in 26 bvFTD patients and compared with demographically matched Alzheimer's disease patients (n=14), and healthy older adults (n=22). Following each moral decision, we directly probed participants' subjective emotional experience as an index of their affective response, while social norm knowledge was assessed via an independent task. While groups did not differ significantly in terms of their moral decisions, bvFTD patients reported feeling 'better' about their decisions than healthy control subjects. In other words, although bvFTD patients could adjudicate between different courses of action in the moral scenarios, their affective responses to these decisions were highly irregular. This blunted emotional reaction was exclusive to the personal high-conflict condition, with 61.5% of bvFTD patients reporting feeling 'extremely good' about their decisions, and was correlated with reduced knowledge of socially acceptable behaviour. Voxel-based morphometry analyses revealed a distributed network of frontal, subcortical, and lateral temporal grey matter regions involved in the attenuated affective response to moral conflict in bvFTD. Crucially, diffusion-tensor imaging implicated the uncinate fasciculus as the pathway by which social conceptual knowledge may influence emotional reactions to personal high-conflict moral dilemmas in bvFTD. Our findings suggest that altered moral behaviour in bvFTD reflects the dynamic interplay between degraded social conceptual knowledge and blunted affective responsiveness, attributable to atrophy of, and impaired information transfer between, frontal and temporal cortices. Delineating the mechanisms of impaired morality in bvFTD provides crucial clinical information for understanding and treating this challenging symptom, which may help pave the way for targeted behavioural interventions.

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