4.8 Article

Human dorsal anterior cingulate cortex neurons mediate ongoing behavioural adaptation

期刊

NATURE
卷 488, 期 7410, 页码 218-+

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature11239

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation [IOB 0645886]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NEI 1R01EY017658-01A1, NIDA 1R01NS063249, MH086400, R25 NS065743]
  3. Klingenstein Foundation
  4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  5. Sackler Scholar Programme in Psychobiology
  6. Centers for Disease Control [5 R01 DP000339]
  7. Benson-Henry Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital for Mind-Body Medicine
  8. David Judah Fund
  9. McIngvale Fund
  10. Center for Functional Neuroimaging Technologies [P41RR14075]

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The ability to optimize behavioural performance when confronted with continuously evolving environmental demands is a key element of human cognition. The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), which lies on the medial surface of the frontal lobes, is important in regulating cognitive control. Hypotheses about its function include guiding reward-based decision making(1), monitoring for conflict between competing responses(2) and predicting task difficulty(3). Precise mechanisms of dACC function remain unknown, however, because of the limited number of human neurophysiological studies. Here we use functional imaging and human single-neuron recordings to show that the firing of individual dACC neurons encodes current and recent cognitive load. We demonstrate that the modulation of current dACC activity by previous activity produces a behavioural adaptation that accelerates reactions to cues of similar difficulty to previous ones, and retards reactions to cues of different difficulty. Furthermore, this conflict adaptation, or Gratton effect(2,4), is abolished after surgically targeted ablation of the dACC. Our results demonstrate that the dACC provides a continuously updated prediction of expected cognitive demand to optimize future behavioural responses. In situations with stable cognitive demands, this signal promotes efficiency by hastening responses, but in situations with changing demands it engenders accuracy by delaying responses.

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