Title of article :
Age shifts frontal cortical control in a cognitive bias task from right to left: part I. Neuropsychological study
Author/Authors :
Masao Aihara، نويسنده , , Kakurou Aoyagi، نويسنده , , Elkhonon Goldberg، نويسنده , , Shinpei Nakazawa، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Two functionally and neurally distinct cognitive selection mechanisms involve the prefrontal lobes: those based on internal representations (context dependent) and those involving exploratory processing of novel situations (context independent). We used a cognitive bias task (CBT) representing contextual reasoning to correlate lateralization with age in the frontal lobes. Subjects included 37 healthy right-handed male children and adolescents (age range, 5–18 years). Controls were 19 right-handed men from 20 to 30 years old. A computer-presented version of the original card-choice task simplified, modified for children was used (modified CBT; mCBT). Simple visual stimuli differed dichotomously in shape, color, number, and shading. A target object presented alone was followed by two choices from which subjects selected according to preference. Considering all four characteristics, similarity between target and subject choice was scored for 30 trials. A high score implied a context-dependent response selection bias and a low score, a context-independent bias. Similarity increased significantly with age. The youngest children (5–7 years) scored lower than ages from 11 years to adulthood. Between 7 and 9 years, scores began to increase with age to reach an adult level by age 13–16. Young children showed context-independent responses representing right frontal lobe function, while adolescents and adults showed context-dependent responses implicating left frontal lobe function. The locus of frontal cortical control in right-handed male subjects thus shifts from right to left as cognitive contextual reasoning develops.
Keywords :
Context-dependent reasoning , Cognitive bias task , Prefrontal lobe function , Lateralization , Handedness
Journal title :
Brain and Development
Journal title :
Brain and Development