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The Role of Medial Prefrontal Cortex in Theory of Mind: A Deep rTMS Study

Journal: Behavioral Brain Research 228:87-90 (2012)


Authors: L Krause, P.G Enticott, A Zangen, P.B Fitzgerlad


Background:


Neuroimaging studies suggest that the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) plays a central role in cognitive theory of mind (ToM).


Objective:


To assess more definitively, using deep transcranial magnetic stimulation (Deep TMS™), whether the mPFC plays a central role in ToM.


Method:


Sixteen healthy participants (10 females, 6 males) completed tasks assessing cognitive and affective ToM following low-frequency Deep TMS to bilateral mPFC in active-stimulation and placebo-stimulation sessions.


Results:


There was no effect of Deep TMS on either cognitive or affective ToM performance. When examining self-reported empathy, however, there was evidence for a double dissociation: Deep TMS disrupted affective ToM performance for those with high self-reported empathy, but improved affective ToM performance for those with low self-reported empathy.


Conclusions:


mPFC appears to play a role in affective ToM processing, but this study suggests that stimulation outcomes are dependent on baseline empathic abilities.


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