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Original Articles

Impaired behavior on real-world tasks following damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex

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Pages 319-332 | Received 19 Dec 2005, Accepted 16 Mar 2006, Published online: 13 Apr 2007
 

Abstract

Patients with damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortices (VMPC) commonly manifest blatant behavioral navigation defects in the real world, but it has been difficult to measure these impairments in the clinic or laboratory. Using a set of “strategy application” tasks, which were designed by CitationShallice and Burgess (1991) to be ecologically valid for detecting executive dysfunction, we investigated the hypothesis that VMPC damage would be associated with defective performance on such tasks, whereas damage outside the VMPC region would not. A group of 9 patients with bilateral VMPC damage was contrasted with comparison groups of participants with (a) prefrontal brain damage outside the VMPC region (n = 8); (b) nonprefrontal brain damage (n = 17); and (c) no brain damage (n = 20). We found support for the hypothesis: VMPC patients had more impaired performances on the strategy application tasks, especially on a Multiple Errands Test that required patients to execute a series of unstructured tasks in a real-world setting (shopping mall). The results are consistent with the notion that efficacious behavioral navigation is dependent on the VMPC region. However, the strategy application tasks were relatively time consuming and effortful, and their diagnostic yield over and above conventional executive functioning tests may not be sufficient to warrant their inclusion in standard clinical assessment.

This study was supported by Program Project Grant NINDS NS19632. We thank Dr. Hanna Damasio for reviewing the neuroanatomical classification for the brain-damaged participants, Dr. Eduardo Vianna for assistance preparing the figures, and Ken Manzel for help with the statistical analyses. D.T. and S.W.A. are supported by NINDS P01 NS19632.

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