Title of article
Dissociable stages of problem solving (II): First evidence for process-contingent temporal order of activation in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
Author/Authors
Ruh، نويسنده , , Nina and Rahm، نويسنده , , Benjamin and Unterrainer، نويسنده , , Josef M. and Weiller، نويسنده , , Cornelius and Kaller، نويسنده , , Christoph P.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
7
From page
170
To page
176
Abstract
In a companion study, eye-movement analyses in the Tower of London task (TOL) revealed independent indicators of functionally separable cognitive processes during problem solving, with processes of building up an internal representation of the problem preceding actual planning processes. These results imply that processes of internalization and planning should also be distinguishable in time and space with respect to concomitant brain activation patterns.
estigate this possibility, here we conducted analyses of fMRI data for left and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) during problem solving in the TOL task by accounting for the trial-by-trial variability of onsets and durations of the different cognitive processing stages. Comparisons between stimulus-locked and response-locked modeling approaches affirmed that activation in left dlPFC was elicited particularly during early processes of internalization, comprising the extraction of goal information and the generation of an internal problem representation, whereas activation in right dlPFC was predominantly attributable to later processes of mental transformations on this representation, that is planning proper.
present data corroborate the proposal that often observed bilateral dlPFC activation patterns during complex cognitive tasks such as problem solving may reflect functionally and, to some extent, even temporally separable processes with opposing lateralizations.
Keywords
FMRI , PLANNING , Prefrontal cortex , Tower of London task , Problem solving
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Brain and Cognition
Record number
2250615
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