Abstract

Social cognition and emotion are ubiquitous human processes that recruit a reliable set of brain networks in healthy individuals. These brain networks typically comprise midline (e.g., medial prefrontal cortex) as well as lateral regions of the brain including homotopic regions in both hemispheres (e.g., left and right temporo-parietal junction). Yet the necessary roles of these networks, and the broader roles of the left and right cerebral hemispheres in socioemotional functioning, remains debated. Here, we investigated these questions in four rare adults whose right (three cases) or left (one case) cerebral hemisphere had been surgically removed (to a large extent) to treat epilepsy. We studied four closely matched healthy comparison participants, and also compared the patient findings to data from a previously published larger healthy comparison sample (n = 33). Participants completed standardized socioemotional and cognitive assessments to investigate social cognition. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data were obtained during passive viewing of a short, animated movie that distinctively recruits two social brain networks: one engaged when thinking about other agents’ internal mental states (e.g., beliefs, desires, emotions; so-called Theory of Mind or ToM network), and the second engaged when thinking about bodily states (e.g., pain, hunger; so-called PAIN network). Behavioral assessments demonstrated remarkably intact general cognitive functioning in all individuals with hemispherectomy. Social-emotional functioning was somewhat variable in the hemispherectomy participants, but strikingly, none of these individuals had consistently impaired social-emotional processing and none of the assessment scores were consistent with a psychiatric disorder. Using inter-region correlation analyses, we also found surprisingly typical ToM and PAIN networks, as well as typical differentiation of the two networks (in the intact hemisphere of patients with either right or left hemispherectomy), based on idiosyncratic reorganization of cortical activation. The findings argue that compensatory brain networks can process social and emotional information following hemispherectomy across different age levels (from 3 months to 20 years old), and suggest that social brain networks typically distributed across midline and lateral brain regions in this domain can be reorganized, to a substantial degree.

Highlights

  • Thinking about other people’s internal states, such as their beliefs or emotions, is necessary for successful social interaction

  • We focus on two networks: the Theory of Mind (ToM) network, and the pain network

  • For the comparison control participants (n = 4) with two intact hemispheres, we presented three sets of Region of Interest (ROI): (a) bilateral including both complete based on responses to the “Partly cloudy” movie in an independent sample, described in detail elsewhere

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Summary

Introduction

Thinking about other people’s internal states, such as their beliefs or emotions, is necessary for successful social interaction. People’s expressions of emotions in faces and body postures guide early behavior in infants [2,3], long before language has developed to communicate internal states verbally. The ability to infer other people’s beliefs and intentions (Theory of Mind, ToM) from their observed behavior—going beyond more basic emotion recognition—develops in children around the age of five [4]. Recent non-invasive functional neuroimaging work in children suggests that by age three, two core brain networks are functionally distinct: one for representing information about other people’s bodies (such as whether they are in pain or not), and another for representing information about their minds (such as what they believe) [7]. The social brain networks underlying these inferences include midline as well as more lateral regions of the brain across both hemispheres

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