Simmonds Daniel J, Pekar James J, Mostofsky Stewart H
Kennedy Krieger Institute, 707 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2008 Jan 15;46(1):224-32. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.07.015. Epub 2007 Jul 28.
FMRI studies of response inhibition consistently reveal frontal lobe activation. Localization within the frontal cortex, however, varies across studies and appears dependent on the nature of the task. Activation likelihood estimate (ALE) meta-analysis is a powerful quantitative method of establishing concurrence of activation across functional neuroimaging studies. For this study, ALE was used to investigate concurrent neural correlates of successfully inhibited No-go stimuli across studies of healthy adults performing a Go/No-go task, a paradigm frequently used to measure response inhibition. Due to the potential overlap of neural circuits for response selection and response inhibition, the analysis included only event-related studies contrasting No-go activation with baseline, which allowed for inclusion of all regions that may be critical to visually guided motor response inhibition, including those involved in response selection. These Go/No-go studies were then divided into two groups: "simple" Go/No-go tasks in which the No-go stimulus was always the same, and "complex" Go/No-go tasks, in which the No-go stimulus changed depending on context, requiring frequent updating of stimulus-response associations in working memory. The simple and complex tasks demonstrated distinct patterns of concurrence, with right dorsolateral prefrontal and inferior parietal circuits recruited under conditions of increased working memory demand. Common to both simple and complex Go/No-go tasks was concurrence in the pre-SMA and the left fusiform gyrus. As the pre-SMA has also been shown to be involved in response selection, the results support the notion that the pre-SMA is critical for selection of appropriate behavior, whether selecting to execute an appropriate response or selecting to inhibit an inappropriate response.
功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对反应抑制的研究一致显示额叶激活。然而,额叶皮层内的定位在不同研究中有所不同,并且似乎取决于任务的性质。激活可能性估计(ALE)元分析是一种强大的定量方法,用于确定功能神经影像学研究中激活的一致性。在本研究中,ALE被用于调查在执行“Go/No-go任务”(一种常用于测量反应抑制的范式)的健康成年人的研究中,成功抑制“不执行”刺激的同时出现的神经关联。由于反应选择和反应抑制的神经回路可能存在重叠,该分析仅包括将“不执行”激活与基线进行对比的事件相关研究,这允许纳入所有可能对视觉引导的运动反应抑制至关重要的区域,包括那些参与反应选择的区域。然后,这些“Go/No-go任务”研究被分为两组:“简单”的Go/No-go任务,其中“不执行”刺激始终相同;以及“复杂”的Go/No-go任务,其中“不执行”刺激根据情境变化,需要在工作记忆中频繁更新刺激-反应关联。简单任务和复杂任务表现出不同的一致性模式,在工作记忆需求增加的情况下,右侧背外侧前额叶和顶下叶回路被激活。简单和复杂的Go/No-go任务共同的是前辅助运动区(pre-SMA)和左侧梭状回的一致性激活。由于前辅助运动区也已被证明参与反应选择,结果支持了前辅助运动区对于选择适当行为至关重要的观点,无论是选择执行适当反应还是选择抑制不适当反应。