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      Scaling of Advanced Theory-of-Mind Tasks

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      Child Development
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Individual Differences in Inhibitory Control and Children's Theory of Mind

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            Current Methodological Considerations in Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analysis

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              Dissociable prefrontal networks for cognitive and affective theory of mind: a lesion study.

              The underlying mechanisms and neuroanatomical correlates of theory of mind (ToM), the ability to make inferences on others' mental states, remain largely unknown. While numerous studies have implicated the ventromedial (VM) frontal lobes in ToM, recent findings have questioned the role of the prefrontal cortex. We designed two novel tasks that examined the hypothesis that affective ToM processing is distinct from that related to cognitive ToM and depends in part on separate anatomical substrates. The performance of patients with localized lesions in the VM was compared to responses of patients with dorsolateral lesions, mixed prefrontal lesions, and posterior lesions and with healthy control subjects. While controls made fewer errors on affective as compared to cognitive ToM conditions in both tasks, patients with VM damage showed a different trend. Furthermore, while affective ToM was mostly impaired by VM damage, cognitive ToM was mostly impaired by extensive prefrontal damage, suggesting that cognitive and affective mentalizing abilities are partly dissociable. By introducing the concept of 'affective ToM' to the study of social cognition, these results offer new insights into the mediating role of the VM in the affective facets of social behavior that may underlie the behavioral disturbances observed in these patients.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Child Development
                Child Dev
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00093920
                November 2016
                November 2016
                : 87
                : 6
                : 1971-1991
                Article
                10.1111/cdev.12566
                27338116
                554ae5ac-03ae-4851-9c93-06a6d7385e17
                © 2016

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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