Cortico-limbic disruption, material-specificity, and deficits in cognitive-affective theory of mind

Abstract The Theory of Mind deficit due to cognitive-affective disintegration is a poorly understood cognitive consequence of cortical and subcortical disruption in right temporal lobe epilepsy. Following Marr's trilevel approach, we used the material-specific processing model to understand the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain communications 2023, Vol.5 (2), p.fcad100
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Varsha, Grewal, Kirat S, Vibha, Deepti, Singh, Rajesh K, Ramanujam, Bhargavi, Nehra, Ashima, Chandra, Sarat P, Gaikwad, Shailesh, Babu, Indupriya, Tripathi, Manjari
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract The Theory of Mind deficit due to cognitive-affective disintegration is a poorly understood cognitive consequence of cortical and subcortical disruption in right temporal lobe epilepsy. Following Marr's trilevel approach, we used the material-specific processing model to understand the Theory of Mind deficit in drug-resistant epilepsy (N = 30). We examined pre- and post-surgery changes in first-order (somatic-affective, non-verbal component) and second-order Theory of Mind (cognitive-verbal component) in three groups formed using: (i) seizure side (right versus left), (ii) right temporal epilepsy (right temporal lobe epilepsy versus non-right temporal lobe epilepsy), and (iii) right temporal lobe epilepsy with amygdalohippocampectomy (right temporal lobe epilepsy versus left temporal lobe epilepsy amygdalohippocampectomy versus non-amygdalohippocampectomy). We observed a marked deficit in the first-order Theory of Mind in the right temporal lobe amygdalohippocampectomy group; we mapped this deficit to decline in the non-verbal component of Theory of Mind (somatic-affective component). Preliminary results support using a material-specific processing model to understand the Theory of Mind deficits in right temporal lobe epilepsy amygdalohippocampectomy. Malleability of verbal processing in presence of deterioration of non-verbal processing might have clinical relevance for post-surgery recovery in right temporal lobe epilepsy amygdalohippocampectomy. Documenting the material-specific nature of deficits (verbal versus non-verbal) in non-western, linguistically, and socioeconomically diverse country enables us to understand the problem of heterogeneity in post-surgery cognitive consequences in the right amygdalohippocampectomy. Post-surgery cognitive deficits in temporal lobe epilepsy are poorly understood; Singh et al. applied material-specific processing model to Theory of mind deficit and observed that cognitive-affective disintegration in right temporal epilepsy with cortico-limbic disruption (amygdalohippocampectomy) showed first order Theory of mind deficit, potentially due to material-specific alteration of non-verbal processing. Graphical Abstract Graphical abstract
ISSN:2632-1297
2632-1297
DOI:10.1093/braincomms/fcad100