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103 | Grounding social concepts in the cerebellum: A multimodal text-level study on cerebellar ataxia

Cognition, Behavior, and Memory

Author: Pamela Lopes da Cunha | email: pamelopes@gmail.com


Pamela Lopes da Cunha 1°2°, Sol Fittipaldi 1°3°, Cecillia Campo 1°3°, Marcelo  Kauffman 4°5°, Sergio Rodriguez , Darío Andres Yacovino 6°7°, Agustin Ibañez 1°3°8°9°, Agustina Birba 1°3°9°, Adolfo Martin Garcia 1°3°8°10°

1° Cognitive Neuroscience Center, University of San Andrés. Bs As, Argentina 

National Agency for Scientific Promotion and Technology (ANPCyT). Bs As, Argentina

National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET). Bs AS, Argentina

Neurogenetics Unit Hospital JM Ramos Mejía. Bs As, Argentina

School of Medicine, UBA, CONICET. Bs As, Argentina

Department of Neurology, Dr. Cesar Milstein Hospital. Bs As, Argentina

  Memory and Balance Clinic. Bs As, Argentina,

Global Brain Health Institute, University of California San Francisco, US and Trinity College. Dublin, Ireland,

Latin American Brain Health Institute (BrainLat), Adolfo Ibáñez University. Santiago, Chile

10° Linguistics and Literature Department, School of Humanities, University of Santiago de Chile. Santiago, Chile

When we interact with people, watch a love movie, or read about others´ confrontations, our brain recruits specific mechanisms for processing social concepts (abstract units evoking interpersonal traits or circumstances). This skill has been related to the functions of fronto-temporo-limbic regions subserving broad sociocognitive abilities. Here, we examined whether social concepts also hinge on the cerebellum, a structure increasingly implicated in social cognition. We recruited 15 cerebellar ataxia (CA) patients (with focal cerebellar atrophy) and 29 healthy controls. Participants listened to a social text (rich in interpersonal events) as well as a non-social text (focused on a single person´s actions), answered comprehension questionnaires, and completed a resting-state functional neuroimaging protocol. CA patients were selectively impaired is social text comprehension, even upon accounting for working memory skills. Also, social text outcomes in controls selectively correlated with connectivity between the cerebellum and cortical regions underpinning multimodal semantics and social cognition. Conversely, no such correlation was observed in the patients. Thus, cerebellar structures and connections seem to play a distinct role in social concept processing. Such findings refine current neurocognitive models of social semantics while revealing potential markers of cerebellar dysfunction.