Literature DB >> 19805050

Decoding cognitive control in human parietal cortex.

Michael Esterman1, Yu-Chin Chiu, Benjamin J Tamber-Rosenau, Steven Yantis.   

Abstract

Efficient execution of perceptual-motor tasks requires rapid voluntary reconfiguration of cognitive task sets as circumstances unfold. Such acts of cognitive control, which are thought to rely on a network of cortical regions in prefrontal and posterior parietal cortex, include voluntary shifts of attention among perceptual inputs or among memory representations, or switches between categorization or stimulus-response mapping rules. A critical unanswered question is whether task set shifts in these different domains are controlled by a common, domain-independent mechanism or by separate, domain-specific mechanisms. Recent studies have implicated a common region of medial superior parietal lobule (mSPL) as a domain-independent source of cognitive control during shifts between perceptual, mnemonic, and rule representations. Here, we use fMRI and event-related multivoxel pattern classification to show that spatial patterns of brain activity within mSPL reliably express which of several domains of cognitive control is at play on a moment-by-moment basis. Critically, these spatiotemporal brain patterns are stable over time within subjects tested several months apart and across a variety of tasks, including shifting visuospatial attention, switching categorization rules, and shifting attention in working memory.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19805050      PMCID: PMC2764943          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0903593106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  41 in total

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  76 in total

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Review 2.  The many faces of preparatory control in task switching: reviewing a decade of fMRI research.

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6.  Cognitive Control Network Contributions to Memory-Guided Visual Attention.

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10.  Avoiding non-independence in fMRI data analysis: leave one subject out.

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