The study was designed to test the hypothesis that indirect inhibition of the insula via cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) would decrease disgust and moral rigidity in 36 healthy individuals undergoing 15 min of tDCS over the temporal lobe. To obtain a comprehensive assessment of disgust, we used subjective (affect rating), physiological (heart rate variability [HRV]), and implicit measures (word-fragment completion), and moral judgment was assessed by asking participants to rate the deontological and altruistic moral wrongness of a revised version of the moral foundations vignettes. We found anodal and cathodal stimulations to, respectively, enhance and decrease self-reported disgust, deontological morality, and HRV. Note that these effects were stronger in individuals with higher levels of obsessive compulsive (OC) traits. Because disgust and sensitivity to deontological guilt are among the most impairing features in OC disorder, it is auspicious that cathodal tDCS could be implemented to reduce such symptoms.

Filthiness of immorality: manipulating disgust and moral rigidity through noninvasive brain stimulation as a promising therapeutic tool for obsessive compulsive disorder / Salvo, Giuseppe; Provenzano, Samantha; Di Bello, Maria; D’Olimpio, Francesca; Ottaviani, Cristina; Mancini, Francesco. - In: CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 2167-7026. - (2021). [10.1177/21677026211009508]

Filthiness of immorality: manipulating disgust and moral rigidity through noninvasive brain stimulation as a promising therapeutic tool for obsessive compulsive disorder

Salvo, Giuseppe
Primo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
Di Bello, Maria
Methodology
;
Ottaviani, Cristina
Penultimo
Conceptualization
;
Mancini, Francesco
Ultimo
Conceptualization
2021

Abstract

The study was designed to test the hypothesis that indirect inhibition of the insula via cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) would decrease disgust and moral rigidity in 36 healthy individuals undergoing 15 min of tDCS over the temporal lobe. To obtain a comprehensive assessment of disgust, we used subjective (affect rating), physiological (heart rate variability [HRV]), and implicit measures (word-fragment completion), and moral judgment was assessed by asking participants to rate the deontological and altruistic moral wrongness of a revised version of the moral foundations vignettes. We found anodal and cathodal stimulations to, respectively, enhance and decrease self-reported disgust, deontological morality, and HRV. Note that these effects were stronger in individuals with higher levels of obsessive compulsive (OC) traits. Because disgust and sensitivity to deontological guilt are among the most impairing features in OC disorder, it is auspicious that cathodal tDCS could be implemented to reduce such symptoms.
2021
noninvasive brain stimulation; disgust; guilt; morality; obsessive compulsive disorder
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Filthiness of immorality: manipulating disgust and moral rigidity through noninvasive brain stimulation as a promising therapeutic tool for obsessive compulsive disorder / Salvo, Giuseppe; Provenzano, Samantha; Di Bello, Maria; D’Olimpio, Francesca; Ottaviani, Cristina; Mancini, Francesco. - In: CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 2167-7026. - (2021). [10.1177/21677026211009508]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1549805
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