Hadland K A, Rushworth M F, Passingham R E, Jahanshahi M, Rothwell J C
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3UD, UK.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2001 Nov 15;13(8):1097-108. doi: 10.1162/089892901753294392.
It has been suggested that the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) is involved in free selection (FS), the process by which subjects themselves decide what action to perform. Evidence for this proposal has been provided by imaging studies showing activation of the DLPFC when subjects randomly generate responses. However, these response selection tasks have a hidden working memory element and it has been widely reported that the DLPFC is activated when subjects perform tasks which involve working memory. The primary aim of this experiment was to establish if the DLPFC is genuinely involved in response selection. We used repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to investigate whether temporary interference of the DLPFC could disrupt performance of a response selection task that had no working memory component. Subjects performed tasks in which they made bimanual sequences of eight nonrepeating finger movements. In the FS task, subjects chose their movements at random while a computer monitor displayed these moves. This visual feedback obviated the need for subjects to maintain their previous moves "on-line." No selection was required for the two control tasks as responses were cued by the visual display. The attentional demands of the control tasks varied. In the high load (HL) version, subjects had to maintain their attention throughout the sequence, but this requirement was absent in the low load (LL) task. rTMS over the DLPFC slowed response times on the FS task and at the end of the sequence on the HL task, but had no effect on the LL task. rTMS over the medial frontal cortex (MFC) slowed response times on the FS task but had no effect on the HL task. This suggests that a response selection task without a working memory load will depend on the DLPFC and the MFC. The difference appears to be that the DLPFC is important when selecting between competing responses or when concentrating if there is a high attentional demand, but that the MFC is only important during the response selection task.
有人提出,背外侧前额叶皮层(DLPFC)参与自由选择(FS),即受试者自行决定执行何种动作的过程。成像研究为这一观点提供了证据,这些研究显示,当受试者随机生成反应时,DLPFC会被激活。然而,这些反应选择任务存在一个隐藏的工作记忆要素,并且有广泛报道称,当受试者执行涉及工作记忆的任务时,DLPFC会被激活。本实验的主要目的是确定DLPFC是否真正参与反应选择。我们使用重复经颅磁刺激(rTMS)来研究DLPFC的暂时干扰是否会破坏一项没有工作记忆成分的反应选择任务的表现。受试者执行任务,即进行由八个不重复手指动作组成的双手序列动作。在自由选择任务中,受试者随机选择动作,同时计算机显示器会显示这些动作。这种视觉反馈消除了受试者在线维持其先前动作的必要性。在两个对照任务中不需要进行选择,因为反应由视觉显示提示。对照任务的注意力要求各不相同。在高负荷(HL)版本中,受试者必须在整个序列中保持注意力,但在低负荷(LL)任务中则没有这一要求。DLPFC部位的rTMS减慢了自由选择任务的反应时间以及高负荷任务序列末尾的反应时间,但对低负荷任务没有影响。内侧前额叶皮层(MFC)部位的rTMS减慢了自由选择任务的反应时间,但对高负荷任务没有影响。这表明,一项没有工作记忆负荷的反应选择任务将依赖于DLPFC和MFC。差异似乎在于,当在相互竞争的反应之间进行选择时,或者在存在高注意力需求时集中注意力时,DLPFC很重要,但MFC仅在反应选择任务期间很重要。