Journal
COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 237-251Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cogbrainres.2005.01.023
Keywords
positron emission tomography; dual task; executive functions; prefrontal cortex
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This PET study explored the neural substrate of both dual-task management and integration task using single tasks that are known not to evoke any prefirontal activation. The paradigm included two simple (visual and auditory) discrimination tasks, a dual task and an integration task (requiring simultaneous visual and auditory discrimination), and baseline tasks (passive viewing and hearing). Data were analyzed using SPM99. As predicted, the comparison of each single task to the baseline task showed no activity in prefirontal areas. The comparison of the dual task to the single tasks demonstrated left-sided foci of activity in the frontal gyrus (BA 9/46, BA 10/47 and BA 6), inferior parietal gyrus (BA 40), and cerebellum. By reference to previous neuroirnaging studies, BA 9/46 was associated with the coordinated manipulation of simultaneously presented information, BA 10/47 with selection processes, BA 6 with articulatory rehearsal, and BA 40 with attentional shifting. Globally similar regions were found for the integration task, except that the inferior parietal gyrus was not recruited. These results confirm the hypothesis that the left prefirontal cortex is implicated in dual-task performance. Moreover, the involvement of a parietal area in the dual task is in keeping with the hypothesis that a parieto-frontal network sustains executive functioning. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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