Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3050774 Epilepsy & Behavior 2007 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Social cognitive neuroscience has highlighted the importance of frontotemporal neurocircuitry for social cognition. Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) impacts these brain areas and their functional connections and might therefore specifically affect social perceptual and cognitive skills. In the study described here, an established paradigm was used to evaluate the social cognitive skills of female patients with left TLE. Study participants were shown dynamic animations in which virtual characters either looked at the human observer directly or looked away toward someone else, thus manipulating self-involvement. The virtual characters then exhibited different facial expressions that were either socially relevant or arbitrary. Participants were asked to rate the communicative intentions of the virtual character. Patients’ ratings of communicative intent appeared to be linked to their own self-involvement in the interaction, whereas healthy volunteers’ ratings of facial expressions were independent of self-involvement. Potential mechanisms for the observed differences are discussed.

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