Studies Flashcards
1
Q
Binkofsky
A
- grasp vs. use
- RT for conflict vs. no conflict objects
- RESULTS: use -> grasp = slower for conflict objects
- grasp (fast)|use (slower) = lasts longer (produces interference effect in grasp system)
- grasp = dorso-dorsal|use = ventro-dorsal
2
Q
Sumner
A
- voluntary control of movement via automatic inhibition
- lesion patients: prime -> mask -> target
- controls are slower in compatible, than incompatible primes (= Negative compatibility effect)
- lesion patients respond faster for compatible primes (= positive compatibility effect / facilitatory priming)
- SMA: inhibition of manual movement
- SEF: inhibition of eye movememt
3
Q
Passingham
A
- self-generated movements in SMA (= MFC)
- fMRI: self-generated/ externally triggered action tasks
- incrased activation of (Pre)SMA during self-generated movement + evaluation of movement
- MFC is involved in generation of self-initiated actions + evaluation / monitoring the action outcomes
4
Q
Xu
A
- FFA (faces) - PPA (houses)
- fMRI: sequential images of faces/ houses + overlapping in the spatial location -> attending either faces or houses
- IFJ = equally responses to faces / houses -> coupled with top-down (d) + bottom-up (v) control
- IFJ participates in attention-based perception by neural snychrony with PPA/FFA
5
Q
Cools
A
- Cognitive set flexibility in PD
- Task-set switching paradigm (letter-naming / digit-naming) | conditions: cross-talk / no-cross talk
- PD patients show same RT on no-cross task + increased RT in cross talk (= switch cost)
- cross-talk: inhibition of competing information was necessary -> striatum is responsible for task switching (affected by dopamine changes in PD)
- deficit in externally guided set shifting (= failure of cognitive control -> disturbed interaction between FC + striatum)
6
Q
Lee (Experiment 1)
A
- cortico-striatal circuits and decision making (+ rodent models)
- value-based probabilistic switching task (mice step on ports w/ changing reward contingencies) : stimulation of D1/D2
- D1 (+) stimulation = contralateral bias
- D2 (-) stimulation = ipsilateral bias
- Ballot box metaphor is correct: D1 activation leads to moer votes for the contralateral action (= biasing) | D2 stimulation biases ipsilaterally (stimulation is integrated into existing activity)
- indirect pathway medium spiney neurons promote ipsilateral choices
7
Q
Lee - experiment 2
A
- cortico-striatal circuits ande decision making (+ rodent models)
- added: auditory cue
- stimulation of A1 (primary auditory C) induced behavioural bias that was predicted by the preferred frequency of the stimulated neurons (+ inactivation = anti bias)
- Ballot box metaphor is correct: D1 activation leads to moer votes for the contralateral action (= biasing) | D2 stimulation biases ipsilaterally (stimulation is integrated into existing activity)
- indirect pathway medium spiney neurons promote ipsilateral choices
8
Q
Willuhn
A
- Cocaine rats (phasic dopamine + addiction)
- rats were trained to self-administer cocaine (3-week study) -> infusion + presentation of light/ tone
- 1st week: drug-cue induced phasic D increase in VMS
- 2nd/3rd week: phasic D signaling in DLS started (not present in week 1)
- phasic D release emerged progressively -> early VMS activation decreased
- Motivational addiction = VMS (limbic circuitry) replaced by behavioural addiction = DLS (regulates efficiency + automaticity) (sensorimotor circuitry
9
Q
O´Doherty
A
- sensory specific satiety
- measures BOLD signal (on/off block design) to the odor of Banana & Vanilla + participants then ate banana (to satiety) and fMRI was conducted, to investiage the response to both
- consistent activation in OFC -> Activity decreased to the odor of the B, but not B
- odor B = less PFC activation (when satied by B, compare to hungry) -> decrease in reward value
- BOLD didnt decrease for V = not related to general olfactory habituation (if it was: vanilla would have to show decrease as well)
- sensory-specific satiety effects shown in OFC (reward value decresases)
10
Q
Camille
A
- stimulus + action value double dissociation
- Patients had lesions in either OFC or dACC compared to controls | stimulus value task (choosing between two decks of cards) vs. action value task (chosing between two possible movements)
- OFC damage: more likely to shift away from choice after a win for stimulus value task (not action) + problem,s with associating new stimulus to old reward -> error during learning
- dACC damage: opposite of OFC (with action value task)
- OFC -> stimulus-value learning | dACC (MCC) -> action-value learning
11
Q
Ulsperger
A
- error monitoring with external feedback
- fMRI: DAMP task (two balls move same direction, at different speeds + different starting points) and participants decide which ball crosses finish line first -> feedback (+/-/0)
- +feedback (primary reward) = VS / NA activity -> phasic dopamine release
- -feedback = habenular -> inhibits phasic dopamine
- 0feedback = lower habenular activity for errors, signals -> higher response conflict + lower reward expectancy (positive error in reward prediction on correct trials)
- reward -> VS ( | nonoccurence of reward (rCMA) -> Error detection (ERN)
12
Q
DeMartino
A
- loss aversion/framing effect (+ confirms Murrey)
- fMRI: financial decision making task -> loss frame: amount of money lost / gain frame: amount of money retained
- loss frame = risk-seeking | gain frame = risk aversion (high amygdala)
- framing effect = choices are sensitive to the way options are presented
- OMPFC = incorporates affective and cognitive information
- ACC =detecs conflict between analytic response tendencies and emotional tendencies
- Amygdala = risk aversion (in line with frame effect)
- high OFC/ vmPFC = more rational
13
Q
Hampton
A
- reversal learning + reward expectancy
- BOLD response: 2 subjects with bilateral amygdala lesions -> 2 tasks: Probabilistic (choosing between 2 stimulus = correct: reward 70/30| incorrect: reward 40/60 -> contingencies change) vs. Deterministic (choosing between 2 stimuli = correct: reward 100/0 | incorrect: reward 0/100)
- SM (entire amygdala damaged) -> P: more likely to switch choice | D: more likely to switch after reward
- AP (each amygdala 50% damaged) -> P: more likely to switch after reward | D: more likely to switch after reward
- Control -> greater anterior Insula + lOFC activity
- Bilateral amygdala damage alters responses in anterior insula/ plOFC (behavioural choices)
- ACC activity after negative feedback (probably induces switch)
14
Q
Krauzils
A
- neurons necessary for sensory processing in tasks
- monkey trained to perform a visual discrimination task -> lesions: superior colliculus (SC)
- attention deficits in monkeys -> correlates with activity in SC
- suppressed SC activity = enhanced attentional modulation of sensory neurons (usually from Striatum)
- attentional impairment is Not solely driven by cortical dysfunction