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Where the brain appreciates the moral of a story
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1995
Year
NeuropsychologyFirst-person NarrativeMoral PhilosophyNeurolinguisticsEmpathySemantic ProcessingMoral IssuePsycholinguisticsCognitionSocial SciencesNarrative RepresentationPositron Emission TomographyCognitive LinguisticsLanguage StudiesCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive SciencePoeticsLanguage NetworkMoral PsychologyBrain RegionsDistributed Brain RegionsLinguisticsPhilosophy Of Mind
To identify the distributed brain regions used for appreciating the grammatical, semantic and thematic aspects of a story, regional cerebral blood flow was measured with positron emission tomography in nine normal volunteers during the reading of Aesop's fables. In four conditions, subjects had to monitor the fables for font changes, grammatical errors, a semantic feature associated with a fable character, and the moral of the fable. Both right and left prefrontal cortices were consistently, but selectively, activated across the grammatical, semantic, and moral conditions. In particular, appreciating the moral of a story required activating a distributed set of brain regions in the right hemisphere which included the temporal and prefrontal cortices. These findings emphasize that story processing engages a widely distributed network of brain regions, a subset of which become preferentially active during the processing of a specific aspect of the text.