University of Newcastle, Australia.
University of Tasmania, Australia.
Cogn Psychol. 2024 Mar;149:101628. doi: 10.1016/j.cogpsych.2023.101628. Epub 2024 Jan 9.
Response inhibition is a key attribute of human executive control. Standard stop-signal tasks require countermanding a single response; the speed at which that response can be inhibited indexes the efficacy of the inhibitory control networks. However, more complex stopping tasks, where one or more components of a multi-component action are cancelled (i.e., response-selective stopping) cannot be explained by the independent-race model appropriate for the simple task (Logan and Cowan 1984). Healthy human participants (n=28; 10 male; 19-40 years) completed a response-selective stopping task where a 'go' stimulus required simultaneous (bimanual) button presses in response to left and right pointing green arrows. On a subset of trials (30%) one, or both, arrows turned red (constituting the stop signal) requiring that only the button-press(es) associated with red arrows be cancelled. Electromyographic recordings from both index fingers (first dorsal interosseous) permitted the assessment of both voluntary motor responses that resulted in overt button presses, and activity that was cancelled prior to an overt response (i.e., partial, or covert, responses). We propose a simultaneously inhibit and start (SIS) model that extends the independent race model and provides a highly accurate account of response-selective stopping data. Together with fine-grained EMG analysis, our model-based analysis offers converging evidence that the selective-stop signal simultaneously triggers a process that stops the bimanual response and triggers a new unimanual response corresponding to the green arrow. Our results require a reconceptualisation of response-selective stopping and offer a tractable framework for assessing such tasks in healthy and patient populations. Significance Statement Response inhibition is a key attribute of human executive control, frequently investigated using the stop-signal task. After initiating a motor response to a go signal, a stop signal occasionally appears at a delay, requiring cancellation of the response. This has been conceptualised as a 'race' between the go and stop processes, with the successful (or failed) cancellation determined by which process wins the race. Here we provide a novel computational model for a complex variation of the stop-signal task, where only one component of a multicomponent action needs to be cancelled. We provide compelling muscle activation data that support our model, providing a robust and plausible framework for studying these complex inhibition tasks in both healthy and pathological cohorts.
反应抑制是人类执行控制的关键属性。标准的停止信号任务要求抑制单一反应;抑制控制网络的抑制效率可以通过抑制反应的速度来衡量。然而,更复杂的停止任务,其中一个或多个多组件动作的组件被取消(即反应选择停止),不能用适合简单任务的独立种族模型来解释(Logan 和 Cowan 1984)。健康的人类参与者(n=28;10 名男性;19-40 岁)完成了一项反应选择停止任务,其中“Go”刺激要求同时(双手)按下响应左、右指向绿色箭头的按钮。在一小部分试验(30%)中,一个或两个箭头变成红色(构成停止信号),要求仅取消与红色箭头相关的按钮按下。来自两个食指(第一背侧骨间肌)的肌电图记录允许评估导致明显按钮按下的自愿运动反应,以及在明显反应之前取消的活动(即部分或隐蔽反应)。我们提出了一个同时抑制和启动(SIS)模型,该模型扩展了独立种族模型,并提供了对反应选择停止数据的高度准确解释。结合精细的肌电图分析,我们的基于模型的分析提供了一致的证据,表明选择性停止信号同时触发了一个停止双手反应的过程,并触发了与绿色箭头相对应的新单手反应。我们的结果需要重新概念化反应选择停止,并为在健康和患者人群中评估此类任务提供了一个可行的框架。
意义声明
反应抑制是人类执行控制的关键属性,通常使用停止信号任务进行研究。在对 Go 信号做出运动反应后,停止信号偶尔会延迟出现,要求取消反应。这被概念化为 Go 和停止过程之间的“赛跑”,成功(或失败)的取消取决于哪个过程获胜。在这里,我们提供了一种新颖的计算模型,用于停止信号任务的一种复杂变体,其中仅需要取消多组件动作的一个组件。我们提供了令人信服的肌肉激活数据来支持我们的模型,为在健康和病理队列中研究这些复杂的抑制任务提供了一个强大且合理的框架。