Moral reasoning through the eyes of persons with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia.

TitleMoral reasoning through the eyes of persons with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsAntoniou, R, Hausermann, T, Sideman, ABernstein, Fong, KCeleste, Callahan, P, Miller, BL, Kramer, JH, Chiong, W, Rankin, KP
JournalFront Neurol
Volume14
Pagination1197213
Date Published2023
ISSN1664-2295
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Persons with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) can exhibit apparently antisocial behaviors. An example is their tendency to adopt utilitarian choices in sacrificial moral dilemmas, i.e. harmful actions to promote overall welfare. Moral cognition models interpret such tendencies as deriving from a lack of emotional engagement and selective impairment in prosocial sentiments.

METHODS: We applied a qualitative approach to test those theoretical assumptions and to further explore the emotional experiences and values of people with bvFTD while they contemplate moral scenarios. We conducted semistructured interviews with 14 participants: 7 persons with bvFTD and 7 older healthy controls. Transcripts were coded using ATLAS.ti 5.0.

RESULTS: During the moral reasoning task, persons with bvFTD reported more positive emotions than negative and showed significantly less cognitive precision in their moral reasoning compared to controls. Persons with bvFTD also organized their choices predominantly around kindness and altruism, and their responses reflected higher rule compliance. Our study showed that bvFTD persons' utilitarian responses to moral dilemmas did not arise from an emotionally disengaged or antisocial perspective. Instead, they were underpinned by positive emotionality and prosocial values.

DISCUSSION: These findings enrich current understandings of moral cognition and highlight the importance of incorporating mixed methods approaches in dementia research that take into consideration the viewpoint of cognitively impaired individuals.

DOI10.3389/fneur.2023.1197213
Alternate JournalFront Neurol
PubMed ID37492849
PubMed Central IDPMC10365271
Grant ListRF1 AG029577 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States