Biological Psychiatry Branch, National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, Maryland.
Hum Brain Mapp. 1994;1(3):194-209. doi: 10.1002/hbm.460010305.
The Stroop interference test requires a person to respond to specific elements of a stimulus while suppressing a competing response. Previous positron emission tomography (PET) work has shown increased activity in the right anterior cingulate gyrus during the Stroop test. It is unclear, however, whether the anterior cingulate participates more in the attentional rather than the response selection aspects of the task or whether different interference stimuli might activate different brain regions. We sought to determine (1) whether the Stroop interference task causes increased activation in the right anterior cingulate as previously reported, (2) whether this activation varied as a function of response time, (3) what brain regions were functionally linked to the cingulate during performance of the Stroop, and (4) whether a modified Stroop task involving emotionally distracting words would activate the cingulate and other limbic and paralimbic regions. Twenty-one healthy volunteers were scanned with H2 (15) O PET while they performed the Stroop interference test (standard Stroop), a modified Stroop task using distracting words with sad emotional content (sad Stroop), and a control task of naming colors. These were presented in a manner designed to maximize the response selection aspects of the task. Images were stereotactically normalized and analyzed using statistical parametric mapping (SPM). Predictably, subjects were significantly slower during the standard Stroop than the sad Stroop or the control task. The left mideingulate region robustly activated during the standard Stroop compared to the control task. The sad Stroop activated this same region, but to a less significant degree. Correlational regional network analysis revealed an inverse relationship between activation in the left mideingulate and the left insula and temporal lobe. Additionally, activity in different regions of the cingulate gyrus correlated with performance speed during the standard Stroop. These results suggest that the left midcingulate is likely to be part of a neural network activated when one attempts to override a competing verbal response. Finally, the left midcingulate region appears to be functionally coupled to the left insula, temporal, and frontal cortex during cognitive interference tasks involving language. These results underscore the important role of the cingulate gyrus in selecting appropriate and suppressing inappropriate verbal responses. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
斯特鲁普干扰测验要求被试者对刺激的特定元素做出反应,同时抑制竞争反应。先前的正电子发射断层扫描(PET)研究表明,在斯特鲁普测验中,右侧前扣带回回出现活动增加。然而,目前尚不清楚前扣带回是否更多地参与任务的注意力而不是反应选择方面,或者不同的干扰刺激是否可能激活不同的脑区。我们试图确定(1)斯特鲁普干扰任务是否如先前报道的那样导致右侧前扣带回的活动增加,(2)这种激活是否随反应时间而变化,(3)在执行斯特鲁普任务期间,哪些脑区与扣带回功能相关,以及(4)涉及情绪干扰词的改良斯特鲁普任务是否会激活扣带回和其他边缘和旁边缘区域。21 名健康志愿者在执行斯特鲁普干扰测验(标准斯特鲁普)、使用带有悲伤情绪内容的干扰词的改良斯特鲁普任务(悲伤斯特鲁普)和命名颜色的对照任务时,使用 H2(15)O PET 进行扫描。这些任务以旨在最大限度地提高任务的反应选择方面的方式呈现。图像通过立体定向归一化并使用统计参数映射(SPM)进行分析。可预测的是,与悲伤斯特鲁普或对照任务相比,被试者在标准斯特鲁普任务中明显较慢。与对照任务相比,标准斯特鲁普任务中左侧中扣带回区域强烈激活。悲伤的斯特鲁普激活了相同的区域,但程度较低。相关区域网络分析显示,左侧中扣带回和左侧岛叶和颞叶之间存在反向关系。此外,在标准斯特鲁普期间,扣带回不同区域的活动与表现速度相关。这些结果表明,左中扣带可能是试图覆盖竞争言语反应时激活的神经网络的一部分。最后,左中扣带区域在涉及语言的认知干扰任务中似乎与左岛叶、颞叶和额叶皮层功能耦合。这些结果强调了扣带回在选择适当和抑制不适当言语反应方面的重要作用。 © 1994 Wiley-Liss,Inc.