Posted By: NITRC ADMIN - Mar 10, 2012 Tool/Resource: Journals
Counterfactual Thinking: An fMRI Study on Changing the Past for a Better Future. Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2012 Mar 7; Authors: Van Hoeck N, Ma N, Ampe L, Baetens K, Vandekerckhove M, Van Overwalle F Abstract Recent studies suggest that a brain network mainly associated with episodic memory has a more general function in imagining oneself in another time, place or perspective (e.g. episodic future thought, theory of mind, default mode). If this is true, counterfactual thinking (e.g. "If I had left the office earlier, I wouldn't have missed my train.") should also activate this network. Present fMRI study explores the common and distinct neural activity of counterfactual and episodic thinking by directly comparing the imagining of upward counterfactuals (creating better outcomes for negative past events) with the re-experiencing of negative past events and the imagining of positive future events. Results confirm that episodic and counterfactual thinking share a common brain network, involving a core memory network (hippocampal area, temporal lobes, midline and lateral parietal lobes) and prefrontal areas that might be related to mentalizing (medial prefrontal cortex) and performance monitoring (right prefrontal cortex). In contrast to episodic past and future thinking, counterfactual thinking recruits some of these areas more strongly and extensively, and additionally activates the bilateral inferior parietal lobe and posterior medial frontal cortex. We discuss these findings in view of recent fMRI evidence on the working of episodic memory and theory of mind. PMID: 22403155 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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