Literature DB >> 12427681

Frontal and parietal lobe activation during transitive inference in humans.

Bettina D Acuna1, James C Eliassen, John P Donoghue, Jerome N Sanes.   

Abstract

Cortical areas engaged in knowledge manipulation during reasoning were identified with functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) while participants performed transitive inference (TI) on an ordered list of 11 items (e.g. if A < B and B < C, then A < C). Initially, participants learned a list of arbitrarily ordered visual shapes. Learning occurred by exposure to pairs of list items that were adjacent in the sequence. Subsequently, functional MR images were acquired as participants performed TI on non-adjacent sequence items. Control tasks consisted of height comparisons (HT) and passive viewing (VIS). Comparison of the TI task with the HT task identified activation resulting from TI, termed 'reasoning', while controlling for rule application, decision processes, perception, and movement, collectively termed 'support processes'. The HT-VIS comparison revealed activation related to support processes. The TI reasoning network included bilateral prefrontal cortex (PFC), pre-supplementary motor area (preSMA), premotor area (PMA), insula, precuneus, and lateral posterior parietal cortex. By contrast, cortical regions activated by support processes included the bilateral supplementary motor area (SMA), primary motor cortex (M1), somatic sensory cortices, and right PMA. These results emphasize the role of a prefrontal-parietal network in manipulating information to form new knowledge based on familiar facts. The findings also demonstrate PFC activation beyond short-term memory to include mental operations associated with reasoning.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12427681     DOI: 10.1093/cercor/12.12.1312

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cereb Cortex        ISSN: 1047-3211            Impact factor:   5.357


  52 in total

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9.  Relational framework improves transitive inference across age groups.

Authors:  Sandra N Moses; Melanie L Ostreicher; Jennifer D Ryan
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2009-05-19

10.  Developmental grey matter changes in superior parietal cortex accompany improved transitive reasoning.

Authors:  Cristián Modroño; Gorka Navarrete; Antoinette Nicolle; José Luis González-Mora; Kathleen W Smith; Miriam Marling; Vinod Goel
Journal:  Think Reason       Date:  2018-10-03
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