4.4 Article

Functional specialization within the medial frontal gyrus for perceptual go/no-go decisions based on what,'' when,'' and where'' related information: An fMRI study

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages 981-993

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/0898929054475226

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30-CA08749] Funding Source: Medline

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Cortical systems engaged during executive and volitional functions receive and integrate input from multiple systems. However, these integration processes are not well understood. In particular, it is not known whether these input pathways converge or remain segregated at the executive levels of cortical information processing. If unilateral information streams are conserved within structures that serve high-level executive functions, then the functional organization within these structures would predictably be similarly organized. If, how- however, unilateral input information streams are integrated within ever, executive-related structures, then activity patterns will not necessarily reflect lower organizations. In this study, subjects were imaged during the performance of a perceptual go/no-go'' task for which instructions were based on spatial go'' (where''), temporal (when''), or object (what'') stimulus features known to engage unilateral processing streams, and the expected hemispheric biases were observed for early processing areas. For example, activity within the inferior and middle occipital gyri, and the middle temporal gyrus, during the what and when tasks, was biased toward the left hemisphere, and toward the right hemisphere during the where'' task. We discover a similar lateralization within the medial frontal gyrus, a region associated with high-level executive functions and decision-related processes. This lateralization was observed regardless of whether the response was executed or imagined, and was demonstrated in multiple sensory modalities. Although active during the go/no-go task, the cingulate gyrus did not show a similar lateralization. These findings further differentiate the organizations and functions of the medial frontal and cingulate executive regions, and suggest that the executive mechanisms operative within the medial frontal gyrus preserve fundamental aspects of input processing streams.

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