Publication: Lesion network localization of criminal behavior
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Date
2018
Published Version
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Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
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Citation
Darby, R. Ryan, Andreas Horn, Fiery Cushman, and Michael D. Fox. 2018. “Lesion network localization of criminal behavior.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 115 (3): 601-606. doi:10.1073/pnas.1706587115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1706587115.
Research Data
Abstract
Following brain lesions, previously normal patients sometimes exhibit criminal behavior. Although rare, these cases can lend unique insight into the neurobiological substrate of criminality. Here we present a systematic mapping of lesions with known temporal association to criminal behavior, identifying 17 lesion cases. The lesion sites were spatially heterogeneous, including the medial prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, and different locations within the bilateral temporal lobes. No single brain region was damaged in all cases. Because lesion-induced symptoms can come from sites connected to the lesion location and not just the lesion location itself, we also identified brain regions functionally connected to each lesion location. This technique, termed lesion network mapping, has recently identified regions involved in symptom generation across a variety of lesion-induced disorders. All lesions were functionally connected to the same network of brain regions. This criminality-associated connectivity pattern was unique compared with lesions causing four other neuropsychiatric syndromes. This network includes regions involved in morality, value-based decision making, and theory of mind, but not regions involved in cognitive control or empathy. Finally, we replicated our results in a separate cohort of 23 cases in which a temporal relationship between brain lesions and criminal behavior was implied but not definitive. Our results suggest that lesions in criminals occur in different brain locations but localize to a unique resting state network, providing insight into the neurobiology of criminal behavior.
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Keywords
Neuroscience, morality, functional connectivity, criminality, sociopathy, lesion
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