Literature DB >> 17158186

Hemispheric specialization in human prefrontal cortex for resolving certain and uncertain inferences.

Vinod Goel1, Michael Tierney, Laura Sheesley, Angela Bartolo, Oshin Vartanian, Jordan Grafman.   

Abstract

Uncertainty is a fact of life that must be accommodated in real-world decision making. Although it has been suggested that the right prefrontal cortex (PFC) has a special role to play in decision making under uncertainty, there is very little hard data to support this hypothesis. To better understand the roles of left and right PFCs in reasoning and decision making in situations with complete and incomplete information, we administered simple inference problems to 18 patients with lateralized focal lesions to PFC (9 right hemisphere, 9 left hemisphere) and 22 age- and education-matched normal controls. The stimuli were systematically manipulated for completeness of information regarding the status of the conclusion. Our results demonstrated a 2-way interaction such that patients with left PFC lesions were selectively impaired in trials with complete information, whereas patients with right PFC lesions were selectively impaired in trials with incomplete information. These results provide compelling evidence for hemispheric specialization for reasoning in PFC and suggest that the right PFC has a critical role to play in reasoning about incompletely specified situations. We postulate this role involves the maintenance of ambiguous mental representations that temper premature overinterpretation by the left hemisphere.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17158186     DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhl132

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


  29 in total

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4.  Transcranial direct current stimulation facilitates decision making in a probabilistic guessing task.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2010-03-24       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Neural correlates of Early Stone Age toolmaking: technology, language and cognition in human evolution.

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6.  Modality-Independent Coding of Scene Categories in Prefrontal Cortex.

Authors:  Yaelan Jung; Bart Larsen; Dirk B Walther
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2018-06-01       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  Contradiction in universal and particular reasoning.

Authors:  Maria Teresa Medaglia; Franca Tecchio; Stefano Seri; Giorgio Di Lorenzo; Paolo M Rossini; Camillo Porcaro
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8.  The brain network for deductive reasoning: a quantitative meta-analysis of 28 neuroimaging studies.

Authors:  Jérôme Prado; Angad Chadha; James R Booth
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2011-05-13       Impact factor: 3.225

9.  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

Review 10.  Explaining and inducing savant skills: privileged access to lower level, less-processed information.

Authors:  Allan Snyder
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2009-05-27       Impact factor: 6.237

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