| Literature DB >> 27074046 |
Anne C Krendl1, Elizabeth A Kensinger2.
Abstract
In the current study we examine how individual differences in older adults' global cognitive function impacts the extent to which their attitudes toward stigmatized individuals are malleable. Because prior research has elucidated the neural processes that are involved in evaluating stigmatized individuals who are responsible or not responsible for their condition, a cognitive neuroscience approach may be well-suited to answer this question. In the current study, 36 older and 17 young adults underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging while evaluating images of homeless people who were described as being responsible or not responsible for their condition. They also indicated how much pity they felt for each of the individuals in order to determine the extent to which their attitudes were malleable (e.g., more pity for not-responsible as compared to responsible individuals). Participants' cognitive function and baseline measure of their attitudes toward stigmatized individuals (including homeless individuals) were assessed. Results revealed that although older adults' attitudes were malleable, the extent to which this was true varied due to individual differences in their global cognitive function. Specifically, the difference in the magnitude of older adults' self-reported pity for not-responsible as compared to responsible homeless individuals was predicted by their global cognitive function. Moreover, the difference in pity that older adults expressed toward not-responsible as compared to responsible homeless individuals was related to activity in the left insula and the anterior cingulate cortex (regions implicated in empathy). These results suggest that attitude malleability is affected by individual differences in global cognitive function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27074046 PMCID: PMC4830528 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mean Empathy Quotient and altruism ratings for young adults (YA) and older adults (OA).
| Scale | YA | OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function | OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Empathy Quotient | 28.07 (8.15) | 25.18 (11.18) | 25.00 (6.93) |
| Altruism | 37.80 (9.06) | 45.42 (7.55) | 42.53 (9.61) |
SD ().
Mean pity ratings for young adults (YA) and older adults (OA).
| Onset type | YA | OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function | OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Responsible onset | 1.73 (0.58) | 1.48 (0.29) | 1.59 (0.63) |
| Not responsible onset | 3.44 (0.51) | 3.50 (0.52) | 3.36 (0.49) |
SD ().
Summary of Hierarchical Regression Analysis Predicting Older Adults’ pity differential score.
| Variable | ß | Δ | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | .40 | .16 | . | ||
| Explicit attitudes | -.39 | -2.21 | |||
| Years of education | .04 | .25 | |||
| Step 2 | .56 | .31 | .16 | ||
| Explicit attitudes | -.55 | -3.15 | |||
| Years of education | -.20 | -1.04 | |||
| Global cognitive Function | .49 | 2.43 |
*p < .05.
** p < .01.
Statistically significant clusters from the main effect of group in the voxel-wise whole brain ANOVA.
—indicates a region that does not fall within a Brodmann area.
| MNI Coordinates | Brodmann area | F | cluster | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Right cuneus | 6, -90, 45 | 19 | 40.69 | 1645 |
| Right cerebellum | 57, -60, -33 | - | 15.46 | 35 |
| Right superior frontal gyrus | 24, 45, 54 | 8 | 15.51 | 416 |
| Right superior parietal cortex | 30, -60, 48 | 7 | 14.83 | 52 |
| Left fusiform gyrus | -48, -27, -18 | 20 | 12.36 | 269 |
| Right precentral gyrus | 51, -6, 63 | 4 | 12.27 | 133 |
| Right precentral gyrus | 42, 6, 24 | 6 | 11.44 | 33 |
| Left cerebellum | -30, -42, -12 | - | 11.36 | 18 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus | 6, 3, 63 | 6 | 11.33 | 35 |
| Right superior temporal gyrus | 69, -21, 18 | 22 | 11.06 | 91 |
| Left cerebellum | -24, -63, -30 | - | 10.47 | 103 |
| Thalamus | 0, -3, 9 | - | 10.42 | 53 |
| Right insula | 39, -15, -6 | - | 9.62 | 27 |
| Midbrain | 9, -21, -27 | - | 9.61 | 39 |
| Right anterior cingulate cortex | 15, 24, 36 | 32 | 8.98 | 41 |
| Right cerebellum | 33, -39, -15 | - | 8.82 | 26 |
| Right cingulate gyrus | 18, 42, -6 | 32 | 8.67 | 21 |
| Right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | 45, 30, -15 | 47 | 8.61 | 29 |
| Left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | -51, 18, -18 | 47 | 8.29 | 33 |
| Left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | -60, 6, 21 | 44 | 8.24 | 27 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus | 24, 42, 27 | 9 | 8.12 | 13 |
| Right postcentral gyrus | 54, -24, 45 | 2 | 7.98 | 99 |
| Left lateral parietal sulcus | -27, -57, 66 | 7 | 7.98 | 17 |
| Right fusiform gyrus | 48, -57, 3 | 37 | 7.58 | 15 |
| Right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | 42, 21, 15 | 44 | 7.54 | 22 |
| Right cerebellum | 9, -60, -27 | - | 7.07 | 22 |
| Left cerebellum | -9, -69, -21 | - | 7.01 | 18 |
p < .005, 13-voxel extent. All coordinates MNI, organized by descending F-values.
Statistically significant clusters from t-tests resulting from the main effect of group.
—indicates a region that does not fall within a Brodmann area.
| Contrast | Region | MNI Coordinates | Brodmann Area | T-value | Cluster size (mm3) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YA > OA | Cuneus | 6, -90, 45 | 18 | 7.54 | 1466 |
| Left cerebellum | -30, -66, -45 | - | 3.97 | 45 | |
| Thalamus | 0, -6, 9 | - | 3.36 | 29 | |
| OA > YA | Right Superior Parietal Lobule | 30, -60, 48 | 7 | 4.01 | 34 |
| Left Middle Temporal Gyrus | -54, -78, 21 | 19 | 3.9 | 86 | |
| Right Ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | 42, 6, 24 | 9 | 3.74 | 32 | |
| Right Middle Frontal Gyrus | 63, 15, 36 | 9 | 3.51 | 35 | |
| Right Postcentral Gyrus | 69, -18, 21 | 43 | 3.49 | 28 | |
| Right Superior Frontal Gyrus | 6, 6, 60 | 6 | 3.49 | 20 | |
| Right Precentral Gyrus | 69, -12, 39 | 6 | 3.41 | 40 | |
| Left Postcentral Gyrus | -57, -24, 57 | 2 | 3.24 | 18 | |
| Right Middle Occipital Gyrus | 45, -81, 6 | 19 | 3.09 | 25 | |
| Right Ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | 48, 27, 12 | 45/46 | 2.86 | 19 | |
| OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function > OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function | Left fusiform gyrus | -30, -42, -12 | 37 | 4.75 | 34 |
| Left insula | -39, -3, 15 | 13 | 3.25 | 19 | |
| OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function > OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function | Left cerebellum | -21, -33, -42 | - | 4.72 | 385 |
| Right superior frontal gyrus | 15, 0, 75 | 6 | 4.62 | 95 | |
| Right cerebellum | 15, -33, -39 | - | 4.20 | 98 | |
| Right anterior cingulate gyrus | 15, 24, 36 | 32 | 4.18 | 848 | |
| Right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | 45, 30, -15 | 11/47 | 4.15 | 189 | |
| Right dorsomedial prefrontal cortex | 12, 39, 30 | 32 | 3.95 | 848 | |
| Right inferior temporal gyrus | 60, -39, -9 | 20 | 3.92 | 64 | |
| Right cerebellum | 45, -51, -21 | - | 3.73 | 77 | |
| Right middle frontal gyrus | 42, 48, -12 | 10/47 | 3.36 | 46 | |
| Left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | -24, 24, -18 | 11/47 | 3.34 | 39 | |
| Right middle frontal gyrus | 24, 45, 24 | 8/9 | 3.25 | 22 |
Statistically significant clusters resulting from the interaction between group and participants’ pity differential scores in a whole-brain multiple regression.
| Region | MNI Coordinates | Brodmann area | T | cluster |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Right Superior Temporal Gyrus | 33, 18, -42 | 38 | 5.08 | 52 |
| Right Precentral Gyrus | 72, 0, 18 | 6 | 4.56 | 62 |
| Left Anterior Cingulate | -12, 45, 0 | 32 | 4.43 | 97 |
| Right Fusiform Gyrus | 54, -6, -24 | 20 | 4.2 | 50 |
| Right ACC/Medial Frontal Gyrus | 12, 51, 6 | 10/24/32 | 4.36 | 77 |
| Right Fusiform Gyrus | 39, -33, -18 | 20 | 4.34 | 14 |
| Right Uncus | 21, -12, -30 | 28 | 4.15 | 25 |
| Right Inferior Frontal Gyrus | 15, 18, -21 | 47 | 4.1 | 57 |
Statistically significant clusters resulting from the parametric modulation with pity ratings for all groups.
| Group | Region | MNI Coordinates | Brodmann area | T | cluster |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Young adults | Right cerebellum | 9, -54, -3 | - | 3.90 | 15 |
| OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function | Left superior temporal gyrus | -66, -27, 12 | 22 | 4.26 | 96 |
| Left fusiform gyrus | -48, -60, 6 | 37 | 4.51 | 96 | |
| Left precentral gyrus | -39, -9, 33 | 6 | 4.18 | 46 | |
| Left insula | -39, -6, 21 | 13 | 3.67 | ||
| Right posterior cingulate gyrus | 18, -27, 36 | 31 | 4.07 | 17 | |
| Left thalamus | -21, -21, 9 | - | 3.92 | 23 | |
| Left cerebellum | -3, -57, -33 | - | 3.68 | 15 | |
| Right orbitofrontal cortex | 15, 18, -18 | 11/25 | 3.48 | 40 | |
| Right superior temporal gyrus | 57, -12, 9 | 22 | 3.44 | 17 | |
| Right thalamus | 6, -15, -6 | . | 3.41 | 17 | |
| Right lateral parietal sulcus | 18, -63, 51 | 7 | 3.40 | 63 | |
| OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function | Left superior temporal gyrus | -60, -27, 12 | 22 | 3.57 | 34 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus | 21, 57, 9 | 10 | 3.41 | 15 | |
| Right lingual gyrus | 24, -87, 3 | 2 | 3.26 | 13 |
- Indicates a region that does not fall within a Brodmann area.
* Indicates a subthreshold cluster.
Statistically significant clusters resulting from the mask between the t-test and parametric results.
—indicates a region that does not fall within a Brodmann area.
| Group | Region | MNI Coordinates | Brodmann area | T | cluster |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Young adults | Right cerebellum | 33, -30, -48 | - | 3.68 | 31 |
| Right cerebellum | 9, -54, -3 | - | 3.48 | 32 | |
| Left cerebellum | -36, -39, -36 | - | 2.34 | 16 | |
| OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function | Left insula | -39, -6, 21 | 13 | 3.67 | 15 |
| OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function | Right midbrain | 12, -21, -27 | - | 2.87 | 29 |
| Right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex | 45, 30, -15 | 11/47 | 2.82 | 26 | |
| Right superior frontal gyrus | 30, 45, 45 | 8 | 2.46 | 77 | |
| Right anterior cingulate cortex | 12, 36, 27 | 32 | 2.20 | 17 |
Fig 1Results from the t-tests from the whole-brain ANOVA for YA > OA with relatively preserved cognitive function (A), OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function > OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function (B), and OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function > OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function (C) when masked with the unbiased parametric modulation for YA, OA with relatively preserved global cognitive function, and OA with relatively impaired global cognitive function, respectively. All data shown at p < .05 corrected on a T1 template brain from SPM8.
Summary of Hierarchical Regression Analysis Predicting Older Adults’ Pity differential score from left insula/left anterior cingulate cortex (ACC).
| Variable | ß | Δ | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | .41 | .17 | . | ||
| Explicit attitudes | -.41 | -2.31 | |||
| Years of education | .10 | .59 | |||
| Step 2 | .55/.53 | .31/.29 | .13/.12 | ||
| Explicit attitudes | -.36/-.36 | -2.16 | |||
| Years of education | .05/.10 | .30/.59 | |||
| L. Insula/ L. ACC | .37/.34 | 2.24 |
* p ≤ .05.