Literature DB >> 26667277

Neuroeconomic dissociation of semantic dementia and behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia.

Winston Chiong1, Kristie A Wood2, Alexander J Beagle2, Ming Hsu3, Andrew S Kayser4, Bruce L Miller2, Joel H Kramer2.   

Abstract

Many neuropsychiatric disorders are marked by abnormal behaviour and decision-making, but prevailing diagnostic criteria for such behaviours are typically qualitative and often ambiguous. Behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (also called semantic dementia) are two clinical variants of frontotemporal dementia with overlapping but distinct anatomical substrates known to cause profound changes in decision-making. We investigated whether abnormal decision-making in these syndromes could be more precisely characterized in terms of dissociable abnormalities in patients' subjective evaluations of valence (positive versus negative outcome) and of time (present versus future outcome). We presented 28 patients with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, 14 patients with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia, 25 patients with Alzheimer's disease (as disease controls), and 61 healthy older control subjects with experimental tasks assaying loss aversion and delay discounting. In general linear models controlling for age, gender, education and Mini-Mental State Examination score, patients with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia were less averse to losses than control subjects (P < 0.001), while patients with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia discounted delayed rewards more steeply than controls (P = 0.019). There was no relationship between loss aversion and delay discounting across the sample, nor in any of the subgroups. These findings suggest that abnormal behaviours in neurodegenerative disease may result from the disruption of either of two dissociable neural processes for evaluating the outcomes of action. More broadly, these findings suggest a role for computational methods to supplement traditional qualitative characterizations in the differential diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders.
© The Author (2015). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  behavioural neurology; computational psychiatry; frontotemporal dementia; impulsivity and inhibition disorders; semantic dementia

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26667277      PMCID: PMC4861653          DOI: 10.1093/brain/awv344

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  29 in total

1.  What happens to personal identity when semantic knowledge degrades? A study of the self and autobiographical memory in semantic dementia.

Authors:  Céline Duval; Béatrice Desgranges; Vincent de La Sayette; Serge Belliard; Francis Eustache; Pascale Piolino
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2011-12-06       Impact factor: 3.139

2.  Episodic future thinking reduces reward delay discounting through an enhancement of prefrontal-mediotemporal interactions.

Authors:  Jan Peters; Christian Büchel
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2010-04-15       Impact factor: 17.173

Review 3.  Prospect theory on the brain? Toward a cognitive neuroscience of decision under risk.

Authors:  Christopher Trepel; Craig R Fox; Russell A Poldrack
Journal:  Brain Res Cogn Brain Res       Date:  2005-04

4.  Contextual control of delay discounting by pathological gamblers.

Authors:  Mark R Dixon; Eric A Jacobs; Scott Sanders
Journal:  J Appl Behav Anal       Date:  2006

5.  Classification of primary progressive aphasia and its variants.

Authors:  M L Gorno-Tempini; A E Hillis; S Weintraub; A Kertesz; M Mendez; S F Cappa; J M Ogar; J D Rohrer; S Black; B F Boeve; F Manes; N F Dronkers; R Vandenberghe; K Rascovsky; K Patterson; B L Miller; D S Knopman; J R Hodges; M M Mesulam; M Grossman
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2011-02-16       Impact factor: 9.910

Review 6.  Power failure: why small sample size undermines the reliability of neuroscience.

Authors:  Katherine S Button; John P A Ioannidis; Claire Mokrysz; Brian A Nosek; Jonathan Flint; Emma S J Robinson; Marcus R Munafò
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2013-04-10       Impact factor: 34.870

7.  Distinct behavioural profiles in frontotemporal dementia and semantic dementia.

Authors:  J S Snowden; D Bathgate; A Varma; A Blackshaw; Z C Gibbons; D Neary
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 10.154

8.  White matter integrity predicts delay discounting behavior in 9- to 23-year-olds: a diffusion tensor imaging study.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Olson; Paul F Collins; Catalina J Hooper; Ryan Muetzel; Kelvin O Lim; Monica Luciana
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 3.225

9.  Individual laboratory-measured discount rates predict field behavior.

Authors:  Christopher F Chabris; David Laibson; Carrie L Morris; Jonathon P Schuldt; Dmitry Taubinsky
Journal:  J Risk Uncertain       Date:  2008-12-01

10.  A critical role for the hippocampus in the valuation of imagined outcomes.

Authors:  Maël Lebreton; Maxime Bertoux; Claire Boutet; Stéphane Lehericy; Bruno Dubois; Philippe Fossati; Mathias Pessiglione
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2013-10-22       Impact factor: 8.029

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  11 in total

1.  Neural and behavioral correlates of episodic memory are associated with temporal discounting in older adults.

Authors:  Karolina M Lempert; Dawn J Mechanic-Hamilton; Long Xie; Laura E M Wisse; Robin de Flores; Jieqiong Wang; Sandhitsu R Das; Paul A Yushkevich; David A Wolk; Joseph W Kable
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2020-07-02       Impact factor: 3.139

2.  Diminished Cortical Thickness Is Associated with Impulsive Choice in Adolescence.

Authors:  Marieta Pehlivanova; Daniel H Wolf; Aristeidis Sotiras; Antonia N Kaczkurkin; Tyler M Moore; Rastko Ciric; Philip A Cook; Angel Garcia de La Garza; Adon F G Rosen; Kosha Ruparel; Anup Sharma; Russell T Shinohara; David R Roalf; Ruben C Gur; Christos Davatzikos; Raquel E Gur; Joseph W Kable; Theodore D Satterthwaite
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2018-02-12       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  Impairment of decision-making in multiple sclerosis: A neuroeconomic approach.

Authors:  Maria Sepúlveda; Begoña Fernández-Diez; Elena H Martínez-Lapiscina; Sara Llufriu; Nuria Sola-Valls; Irati Zubizarreta; Yolanda Blanco; Albert Saiz; Dino Levy; Paul Glimcher; Pablo Villoslada
Journal:  Mult Scler       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 6.312

4.  Amount and delay insensitivity during intertemporal choice in three neurodegenerative diseases reflects dorsomedial prefrontal atrophy.

Authors:  Alexander J Beagle; Ali Zahir; Mia Borzello; Andrew S Kayser; Ming Hsu; Bruce L Miller; Joel H Kramer; Winston Chiong
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2019-10-31       Impact factor: 4.027

5.  Interoception Primes Emotional Processing: Multimodal Evidence from Neurodegeneration.

Authors:  Paula C Salamone; Agustina Legaz; Lucas Sedeño; Sebastián Moguilner; Matías Fraile-Vazquez; Cecilia Gonzalez Campo; Sol Fittipaldi; Adrián Yoris; Magdalena Miranda; Agustina Birba; Agostina Galiani; Sofía Abrevaya; Alejandra Neely; Miguel Martorell Caro; Florencia Alifano; Roque Villagra; Florencia Anunziata; Maira Okada de Oliveira; Ricardo M Pautassi; Andrea Slachevsky; Cecilia Serrano; Adolfo M García; Agustín Ibañez
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2021-04-07       Impact factor: 6.167

6.  Interactions between decision-making and emotion in behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Aurélie L Manuel; Daniel Roquet; Ramon Landin-Romero; Fiona Kumfor; Rebekah M Ahmed; John R Hodges; Olivier Piguet
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2020-07-30       Impact factor: 3.436

7.  The drift diffusion model as the choice rule in inter-temporal and risky choice: A case study in medial orbitofrontal cortex lesion patients and controls.

Authors:  Jan Peters; Mark D'Esposito
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2020-04-20       Impact factor: 4.475

8.  Increased Loss Aversion in Unmedicated Patients with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.

Authors:  Kamila E Sip; Richard Gonzalez; Stephan F Taylor; Emily R Stern
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2018-01-15       Impact factor: 4.157

9.  A lesion model of envy and Schadenfreude: legal, deservingness and moral dimensions as revealed by neurodegeneration.

Authors:  Hernando Santamaría-García; Sandra Baez; Pablo Reyes; José A Santamaría-García; José M Santacruz-Escudero; Diana Matallana; Analía Arévalo; Mariano Sigman; Adolfo M García; Agustín Ibáñez
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 13.501

10.  Links between autobiographical memory richness and temporal discounting in older adults.

Authors:  Karolina M Lempert; Kameron A MacNear; David A Wolk; Joseph W Kable
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-04-14       Impact factor: 4.379

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