Department of Psychology, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, South Korea; Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
Cortex. 2014 Jan;50:76-85. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2013.08.011. Epub 2013 Aug 30.
Daily life requires people to monitor and resolve conflict arising from distracting information irrelevant to current goals. The highly influential conflict monitoring theory (CMT) holds that the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) detects conflict and subsequently triggers the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) to regulate that conflict. Multiple lines of evidence have provided support for CMT. For example, performance is faster on incongruent trials that follow other incongruent trials (iI), and is accompanied by reduced ACC and increased DLPFC activation (the conflict adaptation effect). In this fMRI study, we explored whether ACC-DLPFC conflict signaling can result in behavioral adjustments beyond on-line contexts. Participants completed a modified version of the Stroop conflict adaptation paradigm which tested for conflict adaptation effects on the current (N) trial associated with not only the immediately preceding (N - 1) trial, but also 2-back (N - 2) trials. Results demonstrated evidence for direct relationships between ACC activity on N - 2 trials and both N trial DLPFC activity and behavioral adjustment when intervening trials were congruent (i.e., icI). In contrast, when N - 1 trials were incongruent (i.e., iiI), ACC-DLPFC signaling failed and conflict adaptation was absent. These results provide new evidence demonstrating that the conflict monitor-controller maintains previously experienced conflict in the service of subsequent behavioral adjustment. However, the processing of multiple, temporally proximal conflict signals takes a toll on the working memory (WM) system, which appears to require resetting in order to adapt our behavior to frequently changing environmental demands.
日常生活需要人们监控和解决与当前目标无关的分心信息所产生的冲突。影响深远的冲突监测理论(CMT)认为,前扣带皮层(ACC)检测冲突,随后触发背外侧前额叶皮层(DLPFC)来调节该冲突。多条证据为 CMT 提供了支持。例如,在紧随其他不一致试验之后的不一致试验(iI)上,表现更快,并且伴随着 ACC 的减少和 DLPFC 的激活增加(冲突适应效应)。在这项 fMRI 研究中,我们探讨了 ACC-DLPFC 冲突信号是否可以导致在线上下文之外的行为调整。参与者完成了一个修改版的 Stroop 冲突适应范式,该范式测试了与当前(N)试验相关的冲突适应效应,不仅与前一个(N-1)试验有关,还与 2 个回溯(N-2)试验有关。结果表明,在干预试验一致(即 icI)的情况下,N-2 试验上的 ACC 活动与 N 试验 DLPFC 活动和行为调整之间存在直接关系。相比之下,当 N-1 试验不一致(即 iiI)时,ACC-DLPFC 信号失败,冲突适应不存在。这些结果提供了新的证据,表明冲突监测控制器在为后续行为调整服务的情况下,保持先前经历的冲突。然而,多个、时间上接近的冲突信号的处理会对工作记忆(WM)系统造成影响,这似乎需要重置,以便根据环境需求的频繁变化调整我们的行为。