, 1994; Anderson et al., 2006; Blake & Grafman, 2006). VmPFC and OFC lesions have been implicated in a variety of emotional and decision-making deficits (Bechara et al., 2000; Fellows, 2007; Clark
et al., 2008; Heberlein et al., 2008). However, the lesions in patients are often a result of stroke or head trauma and as a result the damage is often not restricted to one cortical area. In conjunction with the previous study reported by Rudebeck et al. (2006), the present results suggest that it is not damage to the mOFC in patients with vmPFC lesions which causes alterations in social behaviour but rather http://www.selleckchem.com/products/Y-27632.html damage to the subgenual and perigenual cingulate cortex and possibly to the medial frontopolar cortex (Bechara et al., 1997; Camille et al., 2004). Furthermore, loss of the white matter tracks underlying damaged cortex may contribute to impairments (Philippi et al., 2009). It remains a possibility that while mOFC is not essential for simple social valuation it is important for more complex judgments involving regret or
guilt (Saver & Damasio, 1991; Camille et al., 2004; Koenigs & Tranel, 2007; Koenigs et al., 2007; Krajbich et al., 2009). However, judgments about regret do not just reflect broader social considerations but they also require consideration of counterfactual outcomes that are then compared with actual outcomes. OSI-744 It has recently become clear that information about counterfactual outcomes is represented in parts of frontopolar cortex (Boorman et al., 2009) that may also be damaged in patients with vmPFC lesions. Judgments about guilt may also require knowledge of one’s own or another person’s intentions and therefore depend on paracingulate areas implicated in theory of mind (Amodio & Frith,
2006; Frith & Frith, 2006; Behrens et al., 2008; Hampton et al., 2008). It is also possible that the mOFC is more important in complex social situations in which choices have to be made between many different possible courses of action. We have found evidence that the macaque mOFC is especially important when decisions have to be made between multiple options that are all associated with different levels of reward (Noonan et al., Astemizole 2010). This suggests that mOFC might be more important in complex social decision-making settings that require consideration of the benefits of several different possible choices. Previous investigations of large OFC lesions have reported reduced fearfulness and increased aggressiveness (Izquierdo et al., 2005; Machado & Bachevalier, 2006, 2008). The work of Machado & Bachevalier (2006) suggests that the lesion in the lateral part of the OFC (area 11 and 13) may have been critical for causing these deficits. Rudebeck et al. (2006) previously showed that animals with PFv+o lesions, which included lateral OFC, were significantly less fearful than control animals and animals with ACCg lesions.