Recognition of Mental State Terms
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 165 (5) , 640-649
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.165.5.640
Abstract
The mind's ability to think about the mind has attracted substantial research interest in cognitive science in recent decades, as 'theory of mind'. No research has attempted to identify the brain basis of this ability, probably because it involves several separate processes. As a first step, we investigated one component process-the ability to recognise mental state terms. In Experiment 1, we tested a group of children with autism (known to have theory of mind deficits) and a control group of children with mental handicap, for their ability to recognise mental state terms in a word list. This was to test if the mental state recognition task was related to traditional theory of mind tests. In Experiment 2, we investigated if in the normal brain, recognition of mental state terms might be localised. The procedure employed single photon emission computerised tomography (SPECT) in normal adult volunteers. We tested the prediction (based on available neurological and animal lesion studies) that there would be increased activation in the orbito-frontal cortex during this task, relative to a control condition, and relative to an adjacent frontal area (frontal-polar cortex). In Experiment 1, the group with autism performed significantly worse than the group without autism. In Experiment 2, there was increased cerebral blood flow during the mental state recognition task in the right orbito-frontal cortex relative to the left frontal-polar region. This simple mental state recognition task appears to relate to theory of mind, in that both are impaired in autism. The SPECT results implicate the orbito-frontal cortex as the basis of this ability.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Annotation: Autism, Executive Functions and Theory of Mind: A Neuropsychological PerspectiveJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1993
- CATEGORY-SPECIFIC NAMING AND COMPREHENSION IMPAIRMENT: A DOUBLE DISSOCIATIONBrain, 1991
- Effects of frontal lobe injury in childhoodDevelopmental Neuropsychology, 1991
- Intracellular localization of 99Tcm-d, 1-HMPAO and 201T1-DDC in rat brainNuclear Medicine Communications, 1989
- Cerebral correlates of imagining colours, faces and a map—I. SPECT of regional cerebral blood flowNeuropsychologia, 1989
- Autistic children's understanding of seeing, knowing and believingBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1988
- Does the autistic child have a “theory of mind” ?Cognition, 1985
- When is attribution of beliefs justified? [P&W]Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1978
- Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind?Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1978
- Emotional responses toward humans in monkeys with selective frontal lesionsPhysiology & Behavior, 1968