| Literature DB >> 22918987 |
Edna C Cieslik1, Karl Zilles, Svenja Caspers, Christian Roski, Tanja S Kellermann, Oliver Jakobs, Robert Langner, Angela R Laird, Peter T Fox, Simon B Eickhoff.
Abstract
The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) has consistently been implicated in cognitive control of motor behavior. There is, however, considerable variability in the exact location and extension of these activations across functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiments. This poses the question of whether this variability reflects sampling error and spatial uncertainty in fMRI experiments or structural and functional heterogeneity of this region. This study shows that the right DLPFC as observed in 4 different experiments tapping executive action control may be subdivided into 2 distinct subregions-an anterior-ventral and a posterior-dorsal one -based on their whole-brain co-activation patterns across neuroimaging studies. Investigation of task-dependent and task-independent connectivity revealed both clusters to be involved in distinct neural networks. The posterior subregion showed increased connectivity with bilateral intraparietal sulci, whereas the anterior subregion showed increased connectivity with the anterior cingulate cortex. Functional characterization with quantitative forward and reverse inferences revealed the anterior network to be more strongly associated with attention and action inhibition processes, whereas the posterior network was more strongly related to action execution and working memory. The present data provide evidence that cognitive action control in the right DLPFC may rely on differentiable neural networks and cognitive functions.Entities:
Keywords: action; connectivity; database; fMRI; prefrontal
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22918987 PMCID: PMC3792742 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhs256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357
Figure 1.Hierarchical cluster analysis of the co-activation profile matrix revealed a separation of the seed voxels into 2 distinct clusters—an anterior-ventral (in green) and a posterior-dorsal (in red).
Figure 2.Anatomically, the 2 clusters resulting from the co-activation based parcellation laid in the inferior frontal sulcus extending into the middle frontal gyrus. The more anterior cluster is depicted in green and the more posterior one in red.
Figure 3.Significantly stronger task-dependent and task-independent connectivity of the anterior versus posterior cluster was observed for its left homotope region and the anterior cingulate cortex.
Figure 4.Significantly stronger task-dependent and task-independent connectivity of the posterior versus anterior cluster was observed for its left homotope region and bilateral posterior parietal cortex.
Figure 5.Functional properties were characterized using the “Behavioral Domain” (A and C) and “Paradigm Class” (B and D) meta-categories in the BrainMap database. Quantitative forward (A and B) and reverse (C and D) inferences revealed functional differences between the anterior (green) and posterior (red) networks.