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Laterality
Asymmetries of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognition
Volume 22, 2017 - Issue 1
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REVIEW

The “self-awareness–anosognosia” paradox explained: How can one process be associated with activation of, and damage to, opposite sides of the brain?

Pages 105-119 | Received 12 Dec 2015, Accepted 28 Mar 2016, Published online: 19 Apr 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Healthy volunteers engaged in self-referential tasks such as reflecting on their personality traits exhibit mostly left lateralized brain activation, yet patients with lack of awareness of their deficit suffer from predominantly right hemisphere damage. How can the same basic process of self-awareness be associated with opposite sides of the brain? Anosognosia and self-awareness substantially differ on important dimensions and thus should not be equated. It is proposed that (1) anosognosia does not actually result from uniquely right hemisphere damage; (2) self-awareness and anosognosia do not constitute unitary concepts and encompass multiple other related processes, most likely associated with activity in distinct anatomical networks; and (3) impaired awareness of deficit is mostly caused by problems with self-monitoring, pre-/post-brain damage comparisons of performance, and episodic memory, and is more passive, unintentional, and about the body. Self-awareness produced by inviting participants to intentionally and actively think about more mental aspects of the self relies on judgements, inferential reasoning, imagination, and semantic memory. Consequently, the “self-awareness–anosognosia” paradox is only apparent. Furthermore, the claim that healthy self-awareness is located in the right hemisphere because anosognosia results from damage to this side of the brain must be fallacious.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Daniel Mograbi, Famira Racy, Hanaa Elmoghrabi, Christina Campbell, and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive comments made on previous versions of this paper.

Notes

1 Such personality trait judgements have been shown to remain intact and accurate in patients suffering from episodic memory problems (Klein, Cosmides, & Costabile, Citation200Citation3). More precisely, evidence suggests that people first develop knowledge of personality traits by evoking specific past examples of behaviours (episodic memory, e.g., “I was on time for class today”) and gradually translate these into more abstract self-representations that become semantic in nature (e.g., “I am punctual”). Thus, access to self-knowledge of traits via semantic memory remains intact when episodic memory is compromised.

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