4.7 Article

Generalizable representations of pain, cognitive control, and negative emotion in medial frontal cortex

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 283-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-017-0051-7

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Funding

  1. JSPS-FWO grant [VS.014.13 N]
  2. JSPS-KAKENHI grant [26460898]
  3. Direction de la Recherche Clinique of the University Hospital of Grenoble Alpes
  4. pharmaceutical lab Ferring
  5. pharmaceutical lab Cephalon
  6. KU Leuven Special Research Fund
  7. Wellcome Trust
  8. [R01 HL089850]
  9. [P01 HL040962]
  10. [OCI-1131801]
  11. [R01 DA035484]
  12. [R01 MH076136]
  13. [R01 MH076137]
  14. [R01 AG043463]
  15. Ministry of Science & ICT (MSIT), Republic of Korea [IBS-R015-D1-2018-A00] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)
  16. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26460898] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The medial frontal cortex, including anterior midcingulate cortex, has been linked to multiple psychological domains, including cognitive control, pain, and emotion. However, it is unclear whether this region encodes representations of these domains that are generalizable across studies and subdomains. Additionally, if there are generalizable representations, do they reflect a single underlying process shared across domains or multiple domain-specific processes? We decomposed multivariate patterns of functional MRI activity from 270 participants across 18 studies into study-specific, subdomain-specific, and domain-specific components and identified latent multivariate representations that generalized across subdomains but were specific to each domain. Pain representations were localized to anterior midcingulate cortex, negative emotion representations to ventromedial prefrontal cortex, and cognitive control representations to portions of the dorsal midcingulate. These findings provide evidence for medial frontal cortex representations that generalize across studies and subdomains but are specific to distinct psychological domains rather than reducible to a single underlying process.

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