Botvinick M, Nystrom L E, Fissell K, Carter C S, Cohen J D
Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
Nature. 1999 Nov 11;402(6758):179-81. doi: 10.1038/46035.
The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), on the medial surface of the frontal lobes of the brain, is widely believed to be involved in the regulation of attention. Beyond this, however, its specific contribution to cognition remains uncertain. One influential theory has interpreted activation within the ACC as reflecting 'selection-for-action', a set of processes that guide the selection of environmental objects as triggers of or targets for action. We have proposed an alternative hypothesis, in which the ACC serves not to exert top-down attentional control but instead to detect and signal the occurrence of conflicts in information processing. Here, to test this theory against the selection-for-action theory, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure brain activation during performance of a task where, for a particular subset of trials, the strength of selection-for-action is inversely related to the degree of response conflict. Activity within the ACC was greater during trials featuring high levels of conflict (and weak selection-for-action) than during trials with low levels of conflict (and strong selection-for-action), providing evidence in favour of the conflict-monitoring account of ACC function.
前扣带回皮质(ACC)位于大脑额叶的内表面,人们普遍认为它参与注意力的调节。然而除此之外,它对认知的具体贡献仍不明确。一种有影响力的理论将ACC内的激活解释为反映“行动选择”,这是一组引导选择环境对象作为行动触发因素或目标的过程。我们提出了另一种假设,即ACC并非施加自上而下的注意力控制,而是检测信息处理中冲突的发生并发出信号。在此,为了将该理论与行动选择理论进行对比测试,我们使用功能磁共振成像来测量一项任务执行过程中的大脑激活情况,在该任务的特定试验子集中,行动选择的强度与反应冲突程度呈负相关。与低冲突水平(和强行动选择)的试验相比,高冲突水平(和弱行动选择)的试验中ACC内的活动更强,这为支持ACC功能的冲突监测观点提供了证据。