Laboratory for Neuro- and Psychophysiology, Neurosciences Department, KU Leuven Medical School, 3000 Leuven, Belgium.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jan 31;38(5):1202-1217. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1111-17.2017. Epub 2017 Dec 20.
A unifying function associated with the default mode network (DMN), which is more active during rest than under active task conditions, has been difficult to define. The DMN is activated during monitoring the external world for unexpected events, as a sentinel, and when humans are engaged in high-level internally focused tasks. The existence of DMN correlates in other species, such as mice, challenge the idea that internally focused, high-level cognitive operations, such as introspection, autobiographical memory retrieval, planning the future, and predicting someone else's thoughts, are evolutionarily preserved defining properties of the DMN. A recent human study demonstrated that demanding cognitive shifts could recruit the DMN, yet it is unknown whether this holds for nonhuman species. Therefore, we tested whether large changes in cognitive context would recruit DMN regions in female and male nonhuman primates. Such changes were measured as displacements of spatial attentional weights based on internal rules of relevance (spatial shifts) compared with maintaining attentional weights at the same location (stay events). Using fMRI in macaques, we detected that a cortical network, activated during shifts, largely overlapped with the DMN. Moreover, fMRI time courses sampled from independently defined DMN foci showed significant shift selectivity during the demanding attention task. Finally, functional clustering based on independent resting state data revealed that DMN and shift regions clustered conjointly, whereas regions activated during the stay events clustered apart. We therefore propose that cognitive shifting in primates generally recruits DMN regions. This might explain a breakdown of the DMN in many neurological diseases characterized by declined cognitive flexibility. Activation of the human default mode network (DMN) can be measured with fMRI when subjects shift thoughts between high-level internally directed cognitive states, when thinking about the self, the perspective of others, when imagining future and past events, and during mind wandering. Furthermore, the DMN is activated as a sentinel, monitoring the environment for unexpected events. Arguably, these cognitive processes have in common fast and substantial changes in cognitive context. As DMN activity has also been reported in nonhuman species, we tested whether shifts in spatial attention activated the monkey DMN. Core monkey DMN and shift-selective regions shared several functional properties, indicating that cognitive shifting, in general, might constitute one of the evolutionarily preserved functions of the DMN.
与默认模式网络(DMN)相关的统一功能在休息时比在主动任务条件下更为活跃,这一功能一直难以定义。DMN 在监测外部世界以发现意外事件时被激活,作为一个监测器,并且在人类从事高级内部关注任务时被激活。DMN 在其他物种中的存在,如老鼠,挑战了这样一种观点,即内部关注、高级认知操作,如内省、自传体记忆检索、规划未来和预测他人的想法,是 DMN 的进化保存的定义属性。最近的一项人类研究表明,需要认知转移的任务可以招募 DMN,但尚不清楚这是否适用于非人类物种。因此,我们测试了认知语境的大变化是否会在雌性和雄性非人类灵长类动物中招募 DMN 区域。这种变化是通过基于相关性的内部规则(空间转移)测量的注意力权重的位移来衡量的,而不是保持注意力权重在同一位置(保持事件)。在猕猴中使用 fMRI,我们发现一个在转移过程中被激活的皮质网络,与 DMN 有很大的重叠。此外,从独立定义的 DMN 焦点中采样的 fMRI 时间过程在要求注意力的任务中表现出显著的转移选择性。最后,基于独立静息态数据的功能聚类表明,DMN 和转移区域共同聚类,而在保持事件中激活的区域则分离聚类。因此,我们提出,灵长类动物的认知转移通常会招募 DMN 区域。这可能解释了许多以认知灵活性下降为特征的神经退行性疾病中 DMN 的崩溃。当被试在高级内部导向认知状态之间转换思维、思考自我、他人的观点、想象未来和过去事件以及进行思维漫游时,fMRI 可以测量人类默认模式网络(DMN)的激活。此外,DMN 作为监测器被激活,监测环境中意外事件的发生。可以说,这些认知过程的共同点是认知语境的快速和实质性变化。由于 DMN 活动也在非人类物种中被报道,我们测试了空间注意力的转移是否会激活猴子的 DMN。猴子的核心 DMN 和选择性转移区域具有一些共同的功能特性,这表明一般来说,认知转移可能是 DMN 的一个进化保存功能之一。