Psychological and Brain Mechanisms of Moral Reasoning for Individuals With Autism
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Key Laboratory of Behavioral Science,Institute of Psychology,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Key Laboratory of Behavioral Science,Institute of Psychology,Chinese Academy of Sciences

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This work was supported by grants from National Social Science Foundation of China(14ZDB161) and Key Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(KJZD-EW-L04)

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    Abstract:

    Deficits in communication are one of the main symptoms for individuals with autism, and studying their mode of moral reasoning might help us explain this phenomenon. Previous research has shown differences in moral reasoning between individuals with autism and normal individuals. For example, people with autism could distinguish moral violation from conventional violation, but they often judged those actors who hurt others without intention deliberately. On the other hand, they were not sensitive to the victim's emotional cues and could not understand what others felt. Such studies suggest that the ability to mind-read and to show empathy with others might be some of the key psychological mechanisms required to complete moral reasoning tasks. Furthermore, other research suggests that there is a relationship between the moral reasoning and language development of individuals with autism. People with autism often explain their moral reasoning by repeating story details and declaring concrete outcomes, but their explanations lack descriptions of abstract moral rules. Brain imaging studies show that there are significant differences between people with autism and typically-developing individuals in the activation in the orbito-frontal cortex (OFC) , amygdala, insula, inferior frontal gyrus(IFG), anterior cingulate cortex(ACC), medial prefrontal cortex(mPFC), default-mode network(DMN) and right temporo-parietal junction(RTPJ) in moral reasoning. These locations are also vital brain regions for theory of mind or empathy. Further studies have shown that when completing sentence processing tasks, people with autism also showed different activation in the verbal functional association areas by contrast with normal individuals, and this might be the internal basis for their explanation mode of moral reasoning. Future research should consider the interaction of the influence of theory of mind, empathy and verbal ability in moral reasoning for individuals with autism, and adopt more non-verbal methods. In addition, future studies could incorporate brain damage technology and hormone level analysis to examine the physiological mechanism of moral reasoning for people with autism comprehensively.

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LI Zhan-Xing, ZHU Li-Qi. Psychological and Brain Mechanisms of Moral Reasoning for Individuals With Autism[J]. Progress in Biochemistry and Biophysics,2015,42(12):1103-1111

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History
  • Received:May 05,2015
  • Revised:November 03,2015
  • Accepted:November 03,2015
  • Online: December 18,2015
  • Published: December 20,2015