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1.
Rev. méd. Chile ; 137(3): 419-425, mar. 2009.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-518504

ABSTRACT

The neuro-scientific study of moral actions and judgments is particularly relevant to medicine, especially when assessing behavior disorders secondary to brain diseases. In this paper, moral behavior is reviewed from an evolutionary and neuro-scientific perspective. We discuss the role of emotions in moral decisions, the role of brain development in moral development and the cerebral basis of moral behavior. Empirical evidence shows a relationship between brain and moral development: changes in cerebral architecture are related to changes in moral decision complexity. Moral development takes a long time, achieving its maturity during adulthood. It is suggested that moral cognition depends on cerebral regions and neural networks related to emotional and cognitive processing (i.e. prefrontal and temporal cortex) and that moral judgments are complex affective and cognitive phenomena. This paper concludes with the suggestion that a satisfactory clinical/legal evaluation of a patient requires that the neural basis of moral behavior should be taken into account.


Subject(s)
Humans , Morals , Neurosciences , Social Behavior , Cognition , Emotions/physiology , Interpersonal Relations , Judgment , Neuropsychology , Neurosciences/legislation & jurisprudence
2.
Rev. chil. neuro-psiquiatr ; 43(2): 109-121, abr.-jun. 2005. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-498185

ABSTRACT

Los trastornos del córtex prefrontal (CPF) permiten explicar la sintomatología de importantes cuadros neurológicos y psiquiátricos, tales como las secuelas de traumatismos encéfalo-craneanos y las esquizofrenias. Sin embargo, y a pesar de la gran importancia de sus funciones, su estudio se ha visto dificultado por razones teóricas, experimentales y clínicas. Recientemente han surgido dos nuevos modelos que intentan explicar los mecanismos a la base del funcionamiento del CPF. Presentamos una revisión de las principales manifestaciones clínicas ante su disfunción, los modelos explicativos postulados tradicionalmente, además de las dos propuestas recientes de Koechlin y Mesulam, para finalizar con una revisión de los instrumentos más utilizados en el ámbito clínico para la evaluación de las funciones propias de esta región, denominadas funciones ejecutivas y de autorregulación del comportamiento.


Dysfunction of prefrontal cortex explains the symptoms of many neurological and psychiatric disorders, such as the consequences of cerebral trauma and schizophrenia. Although the importance of frontal lobe functions in complex cognition has long been recognized, systematic research efforts to specify the nature, organization and roles of these functions have been difficult for theoretical, experimental and clinical reasons. Recently, two new theoretical frameworks have been proposed to explain the role of prefrontal cortex. In this paper, we present a revision of the main clinical manifestations secondary to prefrontal dysfunction, the frameworks proposed by Mesulam and Koechlin to explain the role of prefrontal cortex in behavior and the principal instruments available to evaluate executive and strategic self-regulation functions.


Subject(s)
Humans , Prefrontal Cortex/physiopathology , Mental Disorders/physiopathology
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