Prado Jérôme, Noveck Ira A
CNRS-Université de Lyon, France.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2007 Apr;19(4):642-57. doi: 10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.642.
Participants experience difficulty detecting that an item depicting an H-in-a-square confirms the logical rule, "If there is not a T then there is not a circle." Indeed, there is a perceptual conflict between the items mentioned in the rule (T and circle) and in the test item (H and square). Much evidence supports the claim that correct responding depends on detecting and resolving such conflicts. One aim of this study is to find more precise neurological evidence in support of this claim by using a parametric event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm. We scanned 20 participants while they were required to judge whether or not a conditional rule was verified (or falsified) by a corresponding target item. We found that the right middorsolateral prefrontal cortex (mid-DLPFC) was specifically engaged, together with the medial frontal (anterior cingulate and presupplementary motor area [pre-SMA]) and parietal cortices, when mismatching was present. Activity in these regions was also linearly correlated with the level of mismatch between the rule and the test item. Furthermore, a psychophysiological interaction analysis revealed that activation of the mid-DLPFC, which increases as mismatching does, was accompanied by a decrease in functional integration with the bilateral primary visual cortex and an increase in functional integration with the right parietal cortex. This indicates a need to break away from perceptual cues in order to select an appropriate logical response. These findings strongly indicate that the regions involved in inhibitory control (including the right mid-DLPFC and the medial frontal cortex) are engaged when participants have to overcome perceptual mismatches in order to provide a logical response. These findings are also consistent with neuroimaging studies investigating the belief bias, where prior beliefs similarly interfere with logical reasoning.
参与者在检测一个描绘正方形内有字母H的项目是否符合逻辑规则“如果没有字母T,那么就没有圆圈”时遇到困难。实际上,规则中提到的项目(T和圆圈)与测试项目(H和正方形)之间存在感知冲突。大量证据支持这样的观点,即正确的反应取决于检测和解决此类冲突。本研究的一个目的是通过使用参数化事件相关功能磁共振成像(fMRI)范式来找到更精确的神经学证据来支持这一观点。我们对20名参与者进行了扫描,要求他们判断一个条件规则是否被相应的目标项目所验证(或证伪)。我们发现,当存在不匹配时,右侧中背外侧前额叶皮层(mid-DLPFC)会与内侧额叶(前扣带回和补充运动前区[pre-SMA])以及顶叶皮层一起被特别激活。这些区域的活动也与规则和测试项目之间的不匹配程度呈线性相关。此外,心理生理交互分析显示,mid-DLPFC的激活随着不匹配程度的增加而增加,同时与双侧初级视觉皮层的功能整合减少,与右侧顶叶皮层的功能整合增加。这表明需要摆脱感知线索以便选择合适的逻辑反应。这些发现有力地表明,当参与者必须克服感知不匹配以提供逻辑反应时,参与抑制控制的区域(包括右侧mid-DLPFC和内侧额叶皮层)会被激活。这些发现也与研究信念偏差的神经影像学研究一致,在信念偏差中,先验信念同样会干扰逻辑推理。