Abstract for "Quantifiable change in functional brain response to empathic and
forgivability judgments with resolution of posttraumatic stress disorder," by Farrow et al. (in press):
Previous functional neuroimaging studies of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have mainly focused on symptom-provocation
paradigms in combat-related PTSD. We sought to elucidate the effect of non-combat-related PTSD on the physiology of social
cognition. Thirteen patients with PTSD underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they engaged in tasks that
(i) involve speculation on another's intention, (ii) invoke empathy and (iii) involve making judgments of the forgivability of
others' actions; each versus baseline social reasoning judgments. A post-therapy fMRI scan followed a course of modified
cognitive behavioural therapy. Post-therapy, we found increased activation in brain regions predicted on the basis of foregoing
work in healthy subjects. These included significant left middle temporal gyrus activation in post-therapy response to empathy
judgments and posterior cingulate gyrus activation in post-therapy response to forgivability judgments. The specific regions of
the human brain activated by empathy and forgivability judgments changed with symptom resolution in PTSD. Time and therapy
are likely contributory factors that lead to a degree of "normalisation" of the neural response to these social cognition tasks.