University of Tampa.
Virginia Tech.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2021 Aug 1;33(9):1657-1678. doi: 10.1162/jocn_a_01683.
Prior research has demonstrated that the frontal lobes play a critical role in the top-down control of behavior, and damage to the frontal cortex impairs performance on tasks that require executive control [Burgess, P. W., & Stuss, D. T. Fifty years of prefrontal cortex research: Impact on assessment. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 23, 755-767, 2017; Stuss, D. T., & Levine, B. Adult clinical neuropsychology: Lessons from studies of the frontal lobes. Annual Review of Psychology, 53, 401-433, 2002]. Across executive functioning tasks, performance deficits are often quantified as the number of false alarms per total number of nontarget trials. However, most studies of frontal lobe function focus on individual task performance and do not discuss commonalities of errors committed across different tasks. Here, we describe a neurocognitive account that explores the link between deficient frontal lobe function and increased false alarms across an array of experimental tasks from a variety of task domains. We review evidence for heightened false alarms following frontal deficits in episodic long-term memory tests, working memory tasks (e.g., n-back), attentional tasks (e.g., continuous performance tasks), interference control tasks (e.g., recent probes), and inhibitory control tasks (e.g., go/no-go). We examine this relationship via neuroimaging studies, lesion studies, and across age groups and pathologies that impact the pFC, and we propose 11 issues in cognitive processing that can result in false alarms. In our review, some overlapping neural regions were implicated in the regulation of false alarms. Ultimately, however, we find evidence for the fractionation and localization of certain frontal processes related to the commission of specific types of false alarms. We outline avenues for additional research that will enable further delineation of the fractionation of the frontal lobes' regulation of false alarms.
先前的研究表明,额叶在行为的自上而下控制中起着关键作用,而额叶皮层的损伤会损害需要执行控制的任务的表现[Burgess, P. W., & Stuss, D. T. 五十年来的前额叶皮质研究:对评估的影响。国际神经心理学会杂志,23, 755-767, 2017; Stuss, D. T., & Levine, B. 成人临床神经心理学:额叶研究的教训。心理学年度评论,53, 401-433, 2002]。在执行功能任务中,表现缺陷通常被量化为每个总非目标试验的错误警报数量。然而,大多数额叶功能研究都集中在个体任务表现上,而没有讨论不同任务中共同的错误。在这里,我们描述了一个神经认知解释,该解释探讨了在各种来自不同任务领域的实验任务中,额叶功能缺陷与错误警报增加之间的联系。我们回顾了在情景性长时记忆测试、工作记忆任务(例如 n-回)、注意任务(例如,连续表现任务)、干扰控制任务(例如,最近的探针)和抑制控制任务(例如,Go/No-Go)中,额叶缺陷后错误警报增加的证据。我们通过神经影像学研究、损伤研究以及影响 pFC 的年龄组和病理学来检查这种关系,并提出了 11 个可能导致错误警报的认知加工问题。在我们的综述中,一些重叠的神经区域被认为与错误警报的调节有关。然而,最终,我们发现某些与特定类型错误警报有关的特定额叶过程的分离和定位的证据。我们概述了进一步研究的途径,这将使进一步划分额叶对错误警报的调节的分离成为可能。