
Atrophy in Distinct Corticolimbic Networks Subserving Socioaffective Behavior in Semantic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia
Author(s) -
Mark C. Eldaief,
David L. Perez,
Megan Quimby,
Daisy Hochberg,
Alexandra Touroutoglou,
Lisa Feldman Barrett,
Bradford C. Dickerson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
dementia and geriatric cognitive disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.026
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1421-9824
pISSN - 1420-8008
DOI - 10.1159/000511341
Subject(s) - psychology , primary progressive aphasia , atrophy , audiology , neuroimaging , developmental psychology , neuroscience , cognitive psychology , frontotemporal dementia , dementia , disease , medicine , pathology
Although traditionally conceptualized as a language disorder, semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA) is often accompanied by significant behavioral and affective symptoms which considerably increase disease morbidity. Specifically, these neuropsychiatric symptoms are characterized by breaches in normative socioaffective function, for example, an inability to read social cues, excessive trusting of others, and decreased empathy. Our prior neuroimaging work identified 3 corticolimbic networks anchored in the amygdala, temporal pole, and frontoinsular cortex: an affiliation network, theorized to mediate social approach behavior; an aversion network, theorized to subserve the appraisal of social threat; and a perception network, theorized to mediate the detection of social cues. We hy-pothesized that degeneration of these networks could provide neuroanatomical substrates for socioaffective deficits in svPPA.