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Action control and selection in social disinhibition following severe TBI: a pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer and outcome devaluation study.

Michaela FilipčíkováBernard BalleineFiona KumforSkye McDonald
Published in: Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology (2024)
It appears that people with clinical levels of social disinhibition are both prone to outcome-response priming effects and insensitive to changes in the value of the consequences of their actions, that is, despite evidence they were aware of the reduction in the value of their actions's outcomes, people with high-level disinhibition kept performing those actions. This pattern has the hallmarks of a habit suggesting their disinhibition reflects a loss of executive control.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • traumatic brain injury
  • working memory
  • early onset
  • severe traumatic brain injury
  • adipose tissue
  • weight loss