Frontal lobe integrity is crucial for risky decision-making. We investigated how frontal lesions affect computational mechanisms underlying risk when decisions impact oneself versus others. Twenty patients with frontal damage and 20 matched controls accepted or rejected mixed-outcome gambles for themselves or an anonymous other. Patients accepted more disadvantageous gambles than controls in the self condition and showed greater caution for another person; controls showed no self-other differenc
Frontal brain injury alters human risky choices in self and other contexts
Farzad Rostami·Fatemeh Sadat Mirfazeli·Jordan Grafman·Raheleh Heyrani·Aryan Yazdanpanah·Amin Jahanbakhshi·Abdol‐Hossein Vahabie·Seyed Vahid Shariat·AmirHussein Abdolalizadeh·Sarvenaz Soltani
