Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task

Establishing a role of the dorsal medial frontal cortex in the performance monitoring and cognitive control has been a challenge to neuroscientists for the past decade. In light of recent findings, the conflict monitoring hypothesis has been elaborated to an action-outcome predictor theory. One of t...

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Main Authors: Ewa eBeldzik, Aleksandra eDomagalik, Halszka eOginska, Tadeusz eMarek, Magdalena eFafrowicz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00664/full
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spelling doaj-56153001b02a48bb9426d88315ee25e02020-11-25T02:53:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612015-12-01910.3389/fnhum.2015.00664160847Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on taskEwa eBeldzik0Aleksandra eDomagalik1Halszka eOginska2Tadeusz eMarek3Magdalena eFafrowicz4Jagiellonian UniversityJagiellonian UniversityJagiellonian UniversityJagiellonian UniversityJagiellonian UniversityEstablishing a role of the dorsal medial frontal cortex in the performance monitoring and cognitive control has been a challenge to neuroscientists for the past decade. In light of recent findings, the conflict monitoring hypothesis has been elaborated to an action-outcome predictor theory. One of the findings that led to this re-evaluation was the fMRI study in which conflict-related brain activity was investigated in terms of the so-called time on task effect, i.e. a linear increase of the BOLD signal with longer response times. The aim of this study was to investigate brain regions involved in the processing of saccadic response conflict and to account for the time on task effect. A modified spatial cueing task was implemented in the event-related fMRI study with oculomotor responses. The results revealed several brain regions which show higher activity for incongruent trials in comparison to the congruent ones, including pre-supplementary motor area together with the frontal and parietal regions. Further analysis accounting for the effect of response time provided evidence that these brain activations were not sensitive to time on task but reflected purely the congruency effect.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00664/fullSaccadesfMRIpre-SMAresponse conflicttime on task effect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ewa eBeldzik
Aleksandra eDomagalik
Halszka eOginska
Tadeusz eMarek
Magdalena eFafrowicz
spellingShingle Ewa eBeldzik
Aleksandra eDomagalik
Halszka eOginska
Tadeusz eMarek
Magdalena eFafrowicz
Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Saccades
fMRI
pre-SMA
response conflict
time on task effect
author_facet Ewa eBeldzik
Aleksandra eDomagalik
Halszka eOginska
Tadeusz eMarek
Magdalena eFafrowicz
author_sort Ewa eBeldzik
title Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
title_short Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
title_full Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
title_fullStr Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
title_full_unstemmed Brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
title_sort brain activations related to saccadic response conflict are not sensitive to time on task
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Establishing a role of the dorsal medial frontal cortex in the performance monitoring and cognitive control has been a challenge to neuroscientists for the past decade. In light of recent findings, the conflict monitoring hypothesis has been elaborated to an action-outcome predictor theory. One of the findings that led to this re-evaluation was the fMRI study in which conflict-related brain activity was investigated in terms of the so-called time on task effect, i.e. a linear increase of the BOLD signal with longer response times. The aim of this study was to investigate brain regions involved in the processing of saccadic response conflict and to account for the time on task effect. A modified spatial cueing task was implemented in the event-related fMRI study with oculomotor responses. The results revealed several brain regions which show higher activity for incongruent trials in comparison to the congruent ones, including pre-supplementary motor area together with the frontal and parietal regions. Further analysis accounting for the effect of response time provided evidence that these brain activations were not sensitive to time on task but reflected purely the congruency effect.
topic Saccades
fMRI
pre-SMA
response conflict
time on task effect
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2015.00664/full
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