Exploring the social brain in schizophrenia: left prefrontal underactivation during mental state attribution

TA Russell, K Rubia, ET Bullmore… - American journal of …, 2000 - Am Psychiatric Assoc
American journal of psychiatry, 2000Am Psychiatric Assoc
OBJECTIVE: Evidence suggests that patients with schizophrenia have a deficit in “theory of
mind,” ie, interpretation of the mental state of others. The authors used functional magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) to investigate the hypothesis that patients with schizophrenia have
a dysfunction in brain regions responsible for mental state attribution. METHOD: Mean brain
activation in five male patients with schizophrenia was compared to that in seven
comparison subjects during performance of a task involving attribution of mental state …
OBJECTIVE
Evidence suggests that patients with schizophrenia have a deficit in “theory of mind,” i.e., interpretation of the mental state of others. The authors used functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to investigate the hypothesis that patients with schizophrenia have a dysfunction in brain regions responsible for mental state attribution.
METHOD
Mean brain activation in five male patients with schizophrenia was compared to that in seven comparison subjects during performance of a task involving attribution of mental state.
RESULTS
During performance of the mental state attribution task, the patients made more errors and showed less blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal in the left inferior frontal gyrus.
CONCLUSIONS
To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first functional MRI study to show a deficit in the left prefrontal cortex in schizophrenia during a socioemotional task.
American Journal of Psychiatry