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  • Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.uti.edu.ec//handle/123456789/3119
    Title: Moral thought after acquired cerebral damage
    Other Titles: El pensamiento moral después del daño cerebral adquirido
    Authors: Ramos-Galarza, Carlos
    Issue Date: 2019
    Publisher: Revista Chilena de Neuro-Psiquiatria. Volume 57, Issue 3, Pages 264 - 271
    Abstract: Introduction: Moral thinking is a mental skill that allows respecting implicit and explicit social norms. One factor that can alter its functioning is acquired brain damage, as is the case of subjects who have suffered a brain injury at the frontal lobe. Aim: To analyze the relationship between the process of moral thinking and brain functioning, through the description of cases that have suffered acquired brain damage, with the purpose of explaining the situation that an individual lives after presenting brain damage and becoming unable to respect social norms. Development: The clinic of patients who have suffered brain damage at the frontal level, such as Phineas Gage, NN and Elliot, is shown, in which it was observed that its state after the traumatic event was characterized by going back to previous stages of thinking moral, unlike a subject who may present brain damage in later structures. Conclusions: We discuss the analysis performed on the role of the frontal lobe in the process of respecting social norms that allow human interaction and how it can be affected by brain damage.
    URI: http://revecuatneurol.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/AR-Pensamiento-Moral.pdf
    http://repositorio.uti.edu.ec//handle/123456789/3119
    Appears in Collections:Artículos Científicos Indexados

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