| Literature DB >> 33935913 |
Giulia Fusi1, Maura Crepaldi2, Laura Colautti3, Massimiliano Palmiero2, Alessandro Antonietti3, Luca Rozzini1, Maria Luisa Rusconi2.
Abstract
A large number of studies, including single case and case series studies, have shown that patients with different types of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) are characterized by the emergence of artistic abilities. This led to the hypothesis of enhanced creative thinking skills as a function of these pathological conditions. However, in the last years, it has been argued that these brain pathologies lead only to an augmented "drive to produce" rather than to the emergence of creativity. Moreover, only a few studies analyzed specific creative skills, such as divergent thinking (DT), by standardized tests. This Mini-Review aimed to examine the extent to which DT abilities are preserved in patients affected by FTD. Results showed that DT abilities (both verbal and figural) are altered in different ways according to the specific anatomical and functional changes associated with the diverse forms of FTD. On the one hand, patients affected by the behavioral form of FTD can produce many ideas because of unimpaired access to memory stores (i.e., episodic and semantic), but are not able to recombine flexibly the information to produce original ideas because of damages in the pre-frontal cortex. On the other hand, patients affected by the semantic variant are impaired also in terms of fluency because of the degradation of their semantic memory store. Potential implications, limitations, and future research directions are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: creativity; divergent thinking; frontotemporal dementia; review; semantic memory
Year: 2021 PMID: 33935913 PMCID: PMC8085258 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.652543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of anatomic, cognitive, and emotional/behavioral alterations observed in the FTD variants.
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Behavioral FTD | Atrophy in the frontal and temporal lobes, the insula and the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), with the earliest involvement of frontal paralimbic cortices and insula (Meeter et al., | Remarkable change in personality with prominent apathy and disinhibition, accompanied by a lack of empathy and insight, stereotypical behaviors and changes in eating habits, obsessive-compulsive behaviors. Executive dysfunctions and altered social cognition are also observed yet with relative preservation of other cognitive areas such as visuospatial function and memory in the early stages (Musa et al., |
| Semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia | Asymmetrical (commonly left- sided) antero-inferior temporal lobe atrophy, hypometabolism or hypoperfusion | Anomia, impaired object knowledge, particularly for low- frequency or low-familiarity items, progressive loss of word meaning and impaired single words comprehension but with preserved fluency and repetition. Possible surface dyslexia and dysgraphia (Gorno-Tempini et al., |
| Non-fluent/agrammatic primary progressive aphasia | Predominantly left-sided inferior fronto-insular atrophy, hypometabolism or hypoperfusion | Characterized by agrammatism and/or apraxia of speech with progressive uncertainties of speech that in turn progress to mutism. Impaired comprehension of syntactically complex sentences, but with spared object knowledge and word comprehension (Gorno-Tempini et al., |
| Logopenic primary progressive aphasia | Left temporoparietal junction, posterior perisylvian or parietal atrophy, hypometabolism or hypoperfusion | Impaired single-word retrieval in spontaneous speech and naming and impaired repetition of sentences and phrases, possible phonological errors in spontaneous speech and naming but with spared single-word comprehension and object knowledge, motor speech and absence of frank agrammatism (Gorno-Tempini et al., |
Studies exploring DT abilities in FTD patients: characteristics, provided data, and results.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Hart and Wade ( | 19 early DAT and 4 FTD; that were treated as a unique “Dementia group” (Mean age = 70.5 ± 8.4); HC (12, Mean age = 70.4, ± 5.9). | Np | Two complex fluency tasks (CFT): adapted AUT and Possible Jobs | Verbal | Not specified | All patients were impaired in every fluency task but AUT and Possible Jobs were more sensitive to early cognitive decline. The analyses were also run without FTD patients and the results were the same. |
| 2. Rankin et al. ( | 18 FTLD: 9 FTD (Mean age = 57.00, ± 5.96) and 9 SD (Mean age = 63.67, ± 6.87); 16 AD (Mean age = 71.00, ± 11.24); 15 HC (Mean age = 66.73, ± 9.37). | Np | TTCT (picture completion task only). | Figural | Fluency, Originality, Elaboration; Resistance to premature closure. + checklist of creative strengths | svPPA patients performed very poorly on standardized testing of non-verbal DT task (in all DT indexes: fluency, originality and elaboration). FTD failed to resist to premature closure, while AD performance is not distinguishable from HC. |
| 3. De Souza et al. ( | 17 bvFTD (Mean age = 71.1, ± 9.13). They showed a history of progressive decline in social interpersonal behavior, with emotional blunting and loss of insight. 17 HC (Mean age = 67.6, ± 6.71). | SPECT at rest: bvFTD patients showed a large bilateral frontal and temporal hypoperfusion | TTCT | Verbal, Figural | Total scores for verbal vs. figural DT. For each category fluency, flexibility and originality scores were calculated. | The bvFTD performed worse in all the DT tasks with respect to HC. Behavioral: The global TTCT score was correlated with general cognitive functioning and with frontal functions measures and batteries. Imaging: in bvFTD patients, positive correlations were mostly found between creativity tests (global, verbal and visual) and rostral pre-frontal cortex perfusion. |
| 4. Ruggiero et al. ( | 11 FTD (Mean age = 70, ± 4.83; 8bvFTD, 3svPPA) considered as a unique group. 15 HC (Mean age = 61.87, ± 8.55). | Np | DTT (Williams, | Figural, verbal (only title) | Fluidity, flexibility, originality, processing | FTD patients showed a decreased performance in all DT subscores (except for the processing subscore). |
| 5. Paulin et al. ( | 15 probable bvFTD (Mean age = 62.9 ± 7.2). | bvFTD: prominent bilateral PFC and anterior temporal atrophy. | AUT | Verbal | Responses were scored in line with standard scoring methods (Barbot et al., | A decrease in all indexes (fluency, flexibility, originality) compared to controls were observed, with also a greater decrease in fluency in svPPA patients. |
DAT, Dementia of Alzheimer's type; FTLD, Frontotemporal lobar degeneration; svPPA, semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia; AD, Alzheimer Disease; bvFTD, behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia; HC, Healthy Control; AUT, Alternative Uses Task; TTCT, Torrance Test of Creative Thinking; DTT, Divergent Thinking Test; Np, Not provided.