# An Examination of the Motives for Attributing and Interpreting Deception in People with Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment

**Authors:** Maria Tilkeridou, Despina Moraitou, Vasileios Papaliagkas, Nikoleta Frantzi, Evdokia Emmanouilidou, Magdalini Tsolaki

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jintelligence12020012 · 2024-01-24

## TL;DR

This study explores how people with memory issues interpret deception, finding they tend to avoid suspecting others even when something seems wrong.

## Contribution

The study reveals that aMCI patients show reduced suspicion of deception, possibly due to cognitive or emotional factors.

## Key findings

- aMCI patients did not interpret potential deception even when they sensed something was wrong.
- They avoided seeking confirmative information about deception compared to young adults.
- This behavior is linked to cognitive impairment or socioemotional selectivity.

## Abstract

The aim of the present study was to examine how a person with amnestic mild cognitive impairment perceives the phenomenon of deception. Amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) usually represents the prodromal phase of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), with patients showing memory impairment but with normal activities of daily living. It was expected that aMCI patients would face difficulties in the attribution and interpretation of deceptive behavior due to deficits regarding their diagnosis. The main sample of the study consisted of 76 older adults who were patients of a daycare center diagnosed with aMCI. A sample of 55 highly educated young adults was also examined in the same experiment to qualitatively compare their performance with that of aMCI patients. Participants were assigned a scenario where a hypothetical partner (either a friend or a stranger) was engaged in a task in which the partner could lie to boost their earnings at the expense of the participant. The results showed that aMCI patients, even if they understood that something was going wrong, did not invest in interpretations of potential deception and tended to avoid searching for confirmative information related to the hypothetical lie of their partner compared to highly educated young adults. It seems that aMCI patients become somehow “innocent”, and this is discussed in terms of cognitive impairment and/or socioemotional selectivity.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Alzheimer’s disease (MONDO:0004975)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cognitive impairment (MESH:D003072), Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment (MESH:D060825), memory impairment (MESH:D008569), AD (MESH:D000544)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10890118/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10890118