The neural basis of human moral cognition
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Reviews Neuroscience
- Vol. 6 (10) , 799-809
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn1768
Abstract
Moral cognitive neuroscience is an emerging field of research that focuses on the neural basis of uniquely human forms of social cognition and behaviour. Recent functional imaging and clinical evidence indicates that a remarkably consistent network of brain regions is involved in moral cognition. These findings are fostering new interpretations of social behavioural impairments in patients with brain dysfunction, and require new approaches to enable us to understand the complex links between individuals and society. Here, we propose a cognitive neuroscience view of how cultural and context-dependent knowledge, semantic social knowledge and motivational states can be integrated to explain complex aspects of human moral cognition.Keywords
This publication has 131 references indexed in Scilit:
- Representation of attitudinal knowledge: role of prefrontal cortex, amygdala and parahippocampal gyrusNeuropsychologia, 2005
- The Neural Basis of Altruistic PunishmentScience, 2004
- Developmental outcomes after early prefrontal cortex damageBrain and Cognition, 2004
- The Involvement of the Orbitofrontal Cortex in the Experience of RegretScience, 2004
- Temporal lobe abnormalities in semantic processing by criminal psychopaths as revealed by functional magnetic resonance imagingPsychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 2003
- From neural 'is' to moral 'ought': what are the moral implications of neuroscientific moral psychology?Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2003
- Human prefrontal cortex: processing and representational perspectivesNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2003
- Functional Neuroanatomy of Emotion: A Meta-Analysis of Emotion Activation Studies in PET and fMRINeuroImage, 2002
- Did Samson Have Antisocial Personality Disorder?Archives of General Psychiatry, 2001
- Deciding Advantageously Before Knowing the Advantageous StrategyScience, 1997