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Original Research

The association between slow cortical potentials preceding antisaccades and disturbances of consciousness in persons with paraphilic sexual behaviour

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Pages 149-158 | Received 06 Sep 2018, Accepted 10 Dec 2018, Published online: 27 Mar 2019
 

Abstract

Saccade characteristics and slow potentials in antisaccade tasks were studied in 37 people with disorders of sexual interest, depending on the disturbances of self-consciousness. The study found a decreased level of frontal cortex activation in subjects with disorders of self-consciousness; in subjects without disturbances of self-consciousness a high level of frontal cortex activation was observed. The findings demonstrate the important role of the frontal cortex in providing self-consciousness.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

Notes

1 Self-consciousness is the awareness of someself as a person with an inherent worldview, interests, motives of behaviour (in the context of research—abnormal behaviour). Self-consciousness is the awareness of someself as a stable unit (awareness of one's own identity, including sexual identity). Disturbances of self-consciousness are found in different mental disorders. We see the disturbances of self-consciousness are considered from the standpoint of the phenomenology by Karl Jaspers.

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