Jean Decety | University of Chicago (original) (raw)

Papers by Jean Decety

Research paper thumbnail of EEG distinguishes heroic narratives in ISIS online video propaganda

Scientific Reports, 2020

The Islamic State (ISIS) was uniquely effective among extremist groups in the Middle East at recr... more The Islamic State (ISIS) was uniquely effective among extremist groups in the Middle East at recruiting Westerners. A major way ISIS accomplished this was by adopting Hollywood-style narrative structures for their propaganda videos. In particular, ISIS utilized a heroic martyr narrative, which focuses on an individual’s personal glory and empowerment, in addition to traditional social martyr narratives, which emphasize duty to kindred and religion. The current work presented adult participants (n = 238) video clips from ISIS propaganda which utilized either heroic or social martyr narratives and collected behavioral measures of appeal, narrative transportation, and psychological dispositions (egoism and empathy) associated with attraction to terrorism. Narrative transportation and the interaction between egoism and empathy predicted video recruitment appeal. A subset of adults (n = 80) underwent electroencephalographic (EEG) measurements while watching a subset of the video-clips. C...

Research paper thumbnail of Sex differences in abnormal white matter development associated with conduct disorder in children

Psychiatry research, Jan 30, 2015

Associations between white matter pathway abnormalities and antisocial personality disorder in ad... more Associations between white matter pathway abnormalities and antisocial personality disorder in adults are well replicated, and there is some evidence for an association of white matter abnormalities with conduct disorder (CD) in adolescents. In this study, white matter maturation using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was examined in 110 children aged 10.0±0.8 years selected to vary widely in their numbers of CD symptoms. The results replicated age-related increases in fractional anisotropy (FA) found in previous studies. There was not a significant association between the number of CD symptoms and FA, but CD symptoms were found to be significantly associated with greater axial and radial diffusivity in a broad range of white matter tracts, particularly in girls. In complementary analyses, there were similar significant differences in axial and radial diffusivity between children who met diagnostic criteria for CD and healthy children with no symptoms of CD, particularly in girls. Bra...

Research paper thumbnail of The neuroscience of morality and social decision-making

Psychology, Crime & Law, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Socio-neuro risk factors for suicidal behavior in criminal offenders with psychotic disorders

Social cognitive and affective neuroscience, Jan 8, 2017

Relative to the general population, individuals with psychotic disorders have a higher risk of su... more Relative to the general population, individuals with psychotic disorders have a higher risk of suicide. Suicide risk is also elevated in criminal offenders. Thus, psychotic-disordered individuals with antisocial tendencies may form an especially high-risk group. We built upon prior risk analyses by examining whether neurobehavioral correlates of social cognition were associated with suicidal behavior in criminal offenders with psychotic disorders. We assessed empathic accuracy and brain structure in four groups: (i) incarcerated offenders with psychotic disorders and past suicide attempts, (ii) incarcerated offenders with psychotic disorders and no suicide attempts, (iii) incarcerated offenders without psychotic disorders and (iv) community non-offenders without psychotic disorders. Established suicide risk variables were examined along with empathic accuracy and gray matter in brain regions implicated in social cognition. Relative to the other groups, offenders with psychotic disor...

Research paper thumbnail of Impulsive-Antisocial Dimension of Psychopathy Linked to Enlargement and Abnormal Functional Connectivity of the Striatum

Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Abnormal fronto-limbic engagement in incarcerated stimulant users during moral processing

Psychopharmacology, Sep 1, 2016

Stimulant use is a significant and prevalent problem, particularly in criminal populations. Previ... more Stimulant use is a significant and prevalent problem, particularly in criminal populations. Previous studies found that cocaine and methamphetamine use is related to impairment in identifying emotions and empathy. Stimulant users also have abnormal neural structure and function of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), amygdala, and anterior (ACC) and posterior cingulate (PCC), regions implicated in moral decision-making. However, no research has studied the neural correlates of stimulant use and explicit moral processing in an incarcerated population. Here, we examine how stimulant use affects sociomoral processing that might contribute to antisocial behavior. We predicted that vmPFC, amygdala, PCC, and ACC would show abnormal neural response during a moral processing task in incarcerated methamphetamine and cocaine users. Incarcerated adult males (N = 211) were scanned with a mobile MRI system while completing a moral decision-making task. Lifetime drug use was assessed. Neur...

Research paper thumbnail of Our Brains are Wired for Morality: Evolution, Development, and Neuroscience

Frontiers for Young Minds, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Promises and Challenges of the Neurobiological Approach to Empathy

Emotion Review, 2011

Empathy is a complex social cognitive construct. Its scientific investigation requires both a car... more Empathy is a complex social cognitive construct. Its scientific investigation requires both a careful analysis of the concepts used as well as a multilevel integrative analysis, including studies with atypical populations, not just neuroimaging data in healthy participants. Further, the fact that the experience of empathy involves both intrapersonal and interpersonal emotional states poses a challenge to neuroscientific investigations.

Research paper thumbnail of Early detection of intentional harm in the human amygdala

Brain : a journal of neurology, Jan 24, 2015

A decisive element of moral cognition is the detection of harm and its assessment as intentional ... more A decisive element of moral cognition is the detection of harm and its assessment as intentional or unintentional. Moral cognition engages brain networks supporting mentalizing, intentionality, empathic concern and evaluation. These networks rely on the amygdala as a critical hub, likely through frontotemporal connections indexing stimulus salience. We assessed inferences about perceived harm using a paradigm validated through functional magnetic resonance imaging, eye-tracking and electroencephalogram recordings. During the task, we measured local field potentials in three patients with depth electrodes (n = 115) placed in the amygdala and in several frontal, temporal, and parietal locations. Direct electrophysiological recordings demonstrate that intentional harm induces early activity in the amygdala (<200 ms), which-in turn-predicts intention attribution. The amygdala was the only site that systematically discriminated between critical conditions and predicted their classific...

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of subjective perspective taking during simulation of action: a PET investigation of agency

Nature neuroscience, 2001

Perspective taking is an essential component in the mechanisms that account for intersubjectivity... more Perspective taking is an essential component in the mechanisms that account for intersubjectivity and agency. Mental simulation of action can be used as a natural protocol to explore the cognitive and neural processing involved in agency. Here we took PET measurements while subjects simulated actions with either a first-person or a third-person perspective. Both conditions were associated with common activation in the SMA, the precentral gyrus, the precuneus and the MT/V5 complex. When compared to the first-person perspective, the third-person perspective recruited right inferior parietal, precuneus, posterior cingulate and frontopolar cortex. The opposite contrast revealed activation in left inferior parietal and somatosensory cortex. We suggest that the right inferior parietal, precuneus and somatosensory cortex are specifically involved in distinguishing self-produced actions from those generated by others.

Research paper thumbnail of Precursors to morality in development as a complex interplay between neural, socioenvironmental, and behavioral facets

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Jan 13, 2015

The nature and underpinnings of infants' seemingly complex, third-party, social evaluations r... more The nature and underpinnings of infants' seemingly complex, third-party, social evaluations remain highly contentious. Theoretical perspectives oscillate between rich and lean interpretations of the same expressed preferences. Although some argue that infants and toddlers possess a "moral sense" based on core knowledge of the social world, others suggest that social evaluations are hierarchical in nature and the product of an integration of rudimentary general processes such as attention allocation and approach and avoidance. Moreover, these biologically prepared minds interact in social environments that include significant variation, which are likely to impact early social evaluations and behavior. The present study examined the neural underpinnings of and precursors to moral sensitivity in infants and toddlers (n = 73, ages 12-24 mo) through a series of interwoven measures, combining multiple levels of analysis including electrophysiological, eye-tracking, behaviora...

Research paper thumbnail of Unconscious affective processing and empathy: an investigation of subliminal priming on the detection of painful facial expressions

Pain, 2009

Results from recent functional neuroimaging studies suggest that facial expressions of pain trigg... more Results from recent functional neuroimaging studies suggest that facial expressions of pain trigger empathic mimicry responses in the observer, in the sense of an activation in the pain matrix. However, pain itself also signals a potential threat in the environment and urges individuals to escape or avoid its source. This evolutionarily primitive aspect of pain processing, i.e., avoidance from the threat value of pain, seems to conflict with the emergence of empathic concern, i.e., a motivation to approach toward the other. The present study explored whether the affective values of targets influence the detection of pain at the unconscious level. We found that the detection of pain was facilitated by unconscious negative affective processing rather than by positive affective processing. This suggests that detection of pain is primarily influenced by its inherent threat value, and that empathy and empathic concern may not rely on a simple reflexive resonance as generally thought. The...

Research paper thumbnail of From the perception of action to the understanding of intention

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2001

Research paper thumbnail of Genetic imaging of the association of oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) polymorphisms with positive maternal parenting

Research paper thumbnail of Integrating intention and context: assessing social cognition in adults with Asperger syndrome

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2012

Research paper thumbnail of Spatiotemporal neural dynamics of moral judgment: a high-density ERP study

Neuropsychologia, 2014

Morality is a pervasive aspect of human nature across all cultures, and neuroscience investigatio... more Morality is a pervasive aspect of human nature across all cultures, and neuroscience investigations are necessary for identifying what computational mechanisms underpin moral cognition. The current study used high-density ERPs to examine how moral evaluations are mediated by automatic and controlled processes as well as how quickly information and causal-intentional representations can be extracted when viewing morally laden behavior. The study also explored the extent to which individual dispositions in affective and cognitive empathy as well as justice sensitivity influence the encoding of moral valence when healthy participants make moral judgments about prosocial (interpersonal assistance) and antisocial (interpersonal harm) actions. Moral judgment differences were reflected in differential amplitudes for components associated with cognitive appraisal (LPP) as well as early components associated with emotional salience (N1 and N2). Moreover, source estimation was performed to in...

Research paper thumbnail of Primary empathy deficits in frontotemporal dementia

Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Social Neuroscience: A new journal

Social Neuroscience, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Oxytocin receptor gene variation predicts empathic concern and autonomic arousal while perceiving harm to others

Social Neuroscience, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Social Neuroscience and its Relationship to Social Psychology

Research paper thumbnail of EEG distinguishes heroic narratives in ISIS online video propaganda

Scientific Reports, 2020

The Islamic State (ISIS) was uniquely effective among extremist groups in the Middle East at recr... more The Islamic State (ISIS) was uniquely effective among extremist groups in the Middle East at recruiting Westerners. A major way ISIS accomplished this was by adopting Hollywood-style narrative structures for their propaganda videos. In particular, ISIS utilized a heroic martyr narrative, which focuses on an individual’s personal glory and empowerment, in addition to traditional social martyr narratives, which emphasize duty to kindred and religion. The current work presented adult participants (n = 238) video clips from ISIS propaganda which utilized either heroic or social martyr narratives and collected behavioral measures of appeal, narrative transportation, and psychological dispositions (egoism and empathy) associated with attraction to terrorism. Narrative transportation and the interaction between egoism and empathy predicted video recruitment appeal. A subset of adults (n = 80) underwent electroencephalographic (EEG) measurements while watching a subset of the video-clips. C...

Research paper thumbnail of Sex differences in abnormal white matter development associated with conduct disorder in children

Psychiatry research, Jan 30, 2015

Associations between white matter pathway abnormalities and antisocial personality disorder in ad... more Associations between white matter pathway abnormalities and antisocial personality disorder in adults are well replicated, and there is some evidence for an association of white matter abnormalities with conduct disorder (CD) in adolescents. In this study, white matter maturation using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was examined in 110 children aged 10.0±0.8 years selected to vary widely in their numbers of CD symptoms. The results replicated age-related increases in fractional anisotropy (FA) found in previous studies. There was not a significant association between the number of CD symptoms and FA, but CD symptoms were found to be significantly associated with greater axial and radial diffusivity in a broad range of white matter tracts, particularly in girls. In complementary analyses, there were similar significant differences in axial and radial diffusivity between children who met diagnostic criteria for CD and healthy children with no symptoms of CD, particularly in girls. Bra...

Research paper thumbnail of The neuroscience of morality and social decision-making

Psychology, Crime & Law, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Socio-neuro risk factors for suicidal behavior in criminal offenders with psychotic disorders

Social cognitive and affective neuroscience, Jan 8, 2017

Relative to the general population, individuals with psychotic disorders have a higher risk of su... more Relative to the general population, individuals with psychotic disorders have a higher risk of suicide. Suicide risk is also elevated in criminal offenders. Thus, psychotic-disordered individuals with antisocial tendencies may form an especially high-risk group. We built upon prior risk analyses by examining whether neurobehavioral correlates of social cognition were associated with suicidal behavior in criminal offenders with psychotic disorders. We assessed empathic accuracy and brain structure in four groups: (i) incarcerated offenders with psychotic disorders and past suicide attempts, (ii) incarcerated offenders with psychotic disorders and no suicide attempts, (iii) incarcerated offenders without psychotic disorders and (iv) community non-offenders without psychotic disorders. Established suicide risk variables were examined along with empathic accuracy and gray matter in brain regions implicated in social cognition. Relative to the other groups, offenders with psychotic disor...

Research paper thumbnail of Impulsive-Antisocial Dimension of Psychopathy Linked to Enlargement and Abnormal Functional Connectivity of the Striatum

Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Abnormal fronto-limbic engagement in incarcerated stimulant users during moral processing

Psychopharmacology, Sep 1, 2016

Stimulant use is a significant and prevalent problem, particularly in criminal populations. Previ... more Stimulant use is a significant and prevalent problem, particularly in criminal populations. Previous studies found that cocaine and methamphetamine use is related to impairment in identifying emotions and empathy. Stimulant users also have abnormal neural structure and function of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), amygdala, and anterior (ACC) and posterior cingulate (PCC), regions implicated in moral decision-making. However, no research has studied the neural correlates of stimulant use and explicit moral processing in an incarcerated population. Here, we examine how stimulant use affects sociomoral processing that might contribute to antisocial behavior. We predicted that vmPFC, amygdala, PCC, and ACC would show abnormal neural response during a moral processing task in incarcerated methamphetamine and cocaine users. Incarcerated adult males (N = 211) were scanned with a mobile MRI system while completing a moral decision-making task. Lifetime drug use was assessed. Neur...

Research paper thumbnail of Our Brains are Wired for Morality: Evolution, Development, and Neuroscience

Frontiers for Young Minds, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of Promises and Challenges of the Neurobiological Approach to Empathy

Emotion Review, 2011

Empathy is a complex social cognitive construct. Its scientific investigation requires both a car... more Empathy is a complex social cognitive construct. Its scientific investigation requires both a careful analysis of the concepts used as well as a multilevel integrative analysis, including studies with atypical populations, not just neuroimaging data in healthy participants. Further, the fact that the experience of empathy involves both intrapersonal and interpersonal emotional states poses a challenge to neuroscientific investigations.

Research paper thumbnail of Early detection of intentional harm in the human amygdala

Brain : a journal of neurology, Jan 24, 2015

A decisive element of moral cognition is the detection of harm and its assessment as intentional ... more A decisive element of moral cognition is the detection of harm and its assessment as intentional or unintentional. Moral cognition engages brain networks supporting mentalizing, intentionality, empathic concern and evaluation. These networks rely on the amygdala as a critical hub, likely through frontotemporal connections indexing stimulus salience. We assessed inferences about perceived harm using a paradigm validated through functional magnetic resonance imaging, eye-tracking and electroencephalogram recordings. During the task, we measured local field potentials in three patients with depth electrodes (n = 115) placed in the amygdala and in several frontal, temporal, and parietal locations. Direct electrophysiological recordings demonstrate that intentional harm induces early activity in the amygdala (<200 ms), which-in turn-predicts intention attribution. The amygdala was the only site that systematically discriminated between critical conditions and predicted their classific...

Research paper thumbnail of Effect of subjective perspective taking during simulation of action: a PET investigation of agency

Nature neuroscience, 2001

Perspective taking is an essential component in the mechanisms that account for intersubjectivity... more Perspective taking is an essential component in the mechanisms that account for intersubjectivity and agency. Mental simulation of action can be used as a natural protocol to explore the cognitive and neural processing involved in agency. Here we took PET measurements while subjects simulated actions with either a first-person or a third-person perspective. Both conditions were associated with common activation in the SMA, the precentral gyrus, the precuneus and the MT/V5 complex. When compared to the first-person perspective, the third-person perspective recruited right inferior parietal, precuneus, posterior cingulate and frontopolar cortex. The opposite contrast revealed activation in left inferior parietal and somatosensory cortex. We suggest that the right inferior parietal, precuneus and somatosensory cortex are specifically involved in distinguishing self-produced actions from those generated by others.

Research paper thumbnail of Precursors to morality in development as a complex interplay between neural, socioenvironmental, and behavioral facets

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Jan 13, 2015

The nature and underpinnings of infants' seemingly complex, third-party, social evaluations r... more The nature and underpinnings of infants' seemingly complex, third-party, social evaluations remain highly contentious. Theoretical perspectives oscillate between rich and lean interpretations of the same expressed preferences. Although some argue that infants and toddlers possess a "moral sense" based on core knowledge of the social world, others suggest that social evaluations are hierarchical in nature and the product of an integration of rudimentary general processes such as attention allocation and approach and avoidance. Moreover, these biologically prepared minds interact in social environments that include significant variation, which are likely to impact early social evaluations and behavior. The present study examined the neural underpinnings of and precursors to moral sensitivity in infants and toddlers (n = 73, ages 12-24 mo) through a series of interwoven measures, combining multiple levels of analysis including electrophysiological, eye-tracking, behaviora...

Research paper thumbnail of Unconscious affective processing and empathy: an investigation of subliminal priming on the detection of painful facial expressions

Pain, 2009

Results from recent functional neuroimaging studies suggest that facial expressions of pain trigg... more Results from recent functional neuroimaging studies suggest that facial expressions of pain trigger empathic mimicry responses in the observer, in the sense of an activation in the pain matrix. However, pain itself also signals a potential threat in the environment and urges individuals to escape or avoid its source. This evolutionarily primitive aspect of pain processing, i.e., avoidance from the threat value of pain, seems to conflict with the emergence of empathic concern, i.e., a motivation to approach toward the other. The present study explored whether the affective values of targets influence the detection of pain at the unconscious level. We found that the detection of pain was facilitated by unconscious negative affective processing rather than by positive affective processing. This suggests that detection of pain is primarily influenced by its inherent threat value, and that empathy and empathic concern may not rely on a simple reflexive resonance as generally thought. The...

Research paper thumbnail of From the perception of action to the understanding of intention

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2001

Research paper thumbnail of Genetic imaging of the association of oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) polymorphisms with positive maternal parenting

Research paper thumbnail of Integrating intention and context: assessing social cognition in adults with Asperger syndrome

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2012

Research paper thumbnail of Spatiotemporal neural dynamics of moral judgment: a high-density ERP study

Neuropsychologia, 2014

Morality is a pervasive aspect of human nature across all cultures, and neuroscience investigatio... more Morality is a pervasive aspect of human nature across all cultures, and neuroscience investigations are necessary for identifying what computational mechanisms underpin moral cognition. The current study used high-density ERPs to examine how moral evaluations are mediated by automatic and controlled processes as well as how quickly information and causal-intentional representations can be extracted when viewing morally laden behavior. The study also explored the extent to which individual dispositions in affective and cognitive empathy as well as justice sensitivity influence the encoding of moral valence when healthy participants make moral judgments about prosocial (interpersonal assistance) and antisocial (interpersonal harm) actions. Moral judgment differences were reflected in differential amplitudes for components associated with cognitive appraisal (LPP) as well as early components associated with emotional salience (N1 and N2). Moreover, source estimation was performed to in...

Research paper thumbnail of Primary empathy deficits in frontotemporal dementia

Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Social Neuroscience: A new journal

Social Neuroscience, 2006

Research paper thumbnail of Oxytocin receptor gene variation predicts empathic concern and autonomic arousal while perceiving harm to others

Social Neuroscience, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Social Neuroscience and its Relationship to Social Psychology