| Literature DB >> 25205661 |
Gina F Humphreys1, Matthew A Lambon Ralph1.
Abstract
How is higher cognitive function organized in the human parietal cortex? A century of neuropsychology and 30 years of functional neuroimaging has implicated the parietal lobe in many different verbal and nonverbal cognitive domains. There is little clarity, however, on how these functions are organized, that is, where do these functions coalesce (implying a shared, underpinning neurocomputation) and where do they divide (indicating different underlying neural functions). Until now, there has been no multi-domain synthesis in order to reveal where there is fusion or fission of functions in the parietal cortex. This aim was achieved through a large-scale activation likelihood estimation (ALE) analysis of 386 studies (3952 activation peaks) covering 8 cognitive domains. A tripartite, domain-general neuroanatomical division and 5 principles of cognitive organization were established, and these are discussed with respect to a unified theory of parietal functional organization.Entities:
Keywords: activation likelihood estimation analysis; angular gyrus; attention; episodic retrieval; functional neuroimaging; inferior parietal lobule; intra-parietal sulcus; neuropsychology; numerical tasks; parietal cortex; phonological processing; semantic processing; sentence-level processing; supramarginal gyrus; the default-mode network; tool-related tasks
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25205661 PMCID: PMC4585503 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhu198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357
Figure 1.Neuroanatomical location of the parietal cortex and its 3 major divisions; the results from the primary ALE analysis showing differential functional recruitment of IPS/SPL, SMG, and AG. Meta-analysis results were thresholded at FDR correction of P < 0.05 and a minimum cluster size of 100 mm³. For clarity, the images are masked to show data from the lateral parietal cortex only (see Supplementary Fig. 3 for whole-brain results).
Figure 2.The overlap between the DMN (black) and the AG-related tasks (automatic semantics [red], episodic retrieval [blue], numerical fact retrieval [green], and sentence-level processing [purple]). Meta-analysis results were thresholded at FDR correction of P < 0.05 and a minimum cluster size of 100 mm³.
The number of contrasts and foci, and example contrasts included in the meta-analysis from each domain
| Domain | Subclass | Example contrast | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Semantic memory retrieval | Automatic | Concrete > abstract; words > non-words | 38 | 379 |
| Top-down | High > low semantic control | 35 | 272 | |
| Phonology | Phonology > semantics; phonology > orthography | 36 | 394 | |
| Episodic memory retrieval | Old > new judgements; recollection detail correlation | 36 | 400 | |
| Attention | Bottom-up | Oddball capture; uncued > cued attention | 27 | 229 |
| Top-down | Visual search; attentional shift; cue period > target period | 24 | 220 | |
| Numerical processing | Fact retrieval | Trained > untrained problems; multiplication > subtraction | 18 | 76 |
| Calculation | Difficult > easy calculations; untrained > trained problems | 24 | 239 | |
| Tools | Tool naming; tool recognition; tool action judgements | 48 | 331 | |
| Sentence-level processing | Sentences > word-lists; high syntactic complexity > low complexity; semantically ambiguous sentences > unambiguous sentences | 37 | 263 | |
| Default-mode network | All contrasts showing task-related deactivation in the BrainMap database | 128 | 1149 | |
| Total | 451 | 3952 |
The results of pairwise comparisons between the “dorsal parietal” tasks (row task > column task)
| Executive semantic decisions | Phonological decisions | Top-down attention | Numerical calculation | Tool-praxis decisions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Executive semantic decisions | — | N.S. | N.S. | N.S. | N.S. |
| Phonological decisions | SPL (left)* | — | N.S. | N.S. | IPS/SPL (left)* |
| Top-down attention | SPL (bilateral)* | SPL (bilateral)* | — | SPL (left)* | SPL (bilateral)* |
| Numerical calculation | IPS/SPL (bilateral)* | IPS/SPL (right)* | N.S. | — | IPS (bilateral)* |
| Tools | Postcentral gyrus (left)* | N.S. | N.S. | Postcentral gyrus (left)** | — |
Note: N.S., not significantly different.
*FDR P < 0.01; **FDR P < 0.05.
The results of pairwise comparisons between the “ventral parietal” tasks (row task > column task)
| Automatic semantics | Episodic retrieval | Numerical fact retrieval | Sentence-level processing | Phonological processing | Bottom-up attention | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Automatic semantics | — | N.S. | N.S. | AG (left)** | AG (bilateral)* | AG (left)* |
| Episodic retrieval | N.S. | — | N.S. | AG (left)* | AG (left)* | N.S. |
| Numerical fact retrieval | N.S. | N.S. | — | AG (left)** | AG (left)* | AG (left)* |
| Sentence-level processing | N.S. | N.S. | N.S. | — | AG (left)* | N.S. |
| Phonological processing | SMG (left)* | N.S. | N.S. | SMG (left)* | — | SMG (left)* |
| Bottom-up attention | SMG (bilateral)* | SMG (right)* | SMG (bilateral)* | SMG (right)* | SMG (right)* | — |
Note: N.S., not significantly different.
*FDR P < 0.01; **FDR P < 0.05.
Figure 3.A schematic depiction summarizing the variation in polarity of activation (with respect to rest/fixation) across tasks and neural regions. Tasks associated with IPS/SPL and SMG generate (positive) activations. There is, however, considerable variation within AG ranging from deactivation (DMN and automatic semantic retrieval tasks) through to activation (for the remaining tasks)— see main text for details.