medial frontal cortex
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2022 ◽  
Vol 33 ◽  
pp. 102934
Author(s):  
Joshua D. McCall ◽  
J. Vivian Dickens ◽  
Ayan S. Mandal ◽  
Andrew T. DeMarco ◽  
Mackenzie E. Fama ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 130 (7) ◽  
pp. 736-747
Author(s):  
Fabio Bernardoni ◽  
Joseph A. King ◽  
Daniel Geisler ◽  
Franziska Ritschel ◽  
Sarah Schwoebel ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua McCall ◽  
Jonathan Vivian Dickens ◽  
Ayan Mandal ◽  
Andrew Tesla DeMarco ◽  
Mackenzie Fama ◽  
...  

Optimal performance in any task relies on the ability to detect and repair errors. The anterior cingulate cortex and the broader posterior medial frontal cortex (pMFC) are active during error processing. However, it is unclear whether damage to the pMFC impairs error monitoring. We hypothesized that successful error monitoring critically relies on connections between the pMFC and broader cortical networks involved in executive functions and the task being monitored. We tested this hypothesis in the context of speech error monitoring in people with post-stroke aphasia. Diffusion weighted images were collected in 51 adults with chronic left-hemisphere stroke and 37 age-matched control participants. Whole-brain connectomes were derived using constrained spherical deconvolution and anatomically-constrained probabilistic tractography. Support vector regressions identified white matter connections in which lost integrity in stroke survivors related to reduced error detection during confrontation naming. Lesioned connections to the bilateral pMFC were related to reduced error monitoring, including many connections to regions associated with speech production and executive function. We conclude that connections to the pMFC support error monitoring. Error monitoring in speech production is supported by the structural connectivity between the pMFC and regions involved in speech production and executive function. Interactions between pMFC and other task relevant processors may similarly be critical for error monitoring in other task contexts.


Author(s):  
Colin Holbrook ◽  
Marco Iacoboni ◽  
Chelsea Gordon ◽  
Shannon Proksch ◽  
Harmony Makhfi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. JN-RM-0011-21
Author(s):  
Nils Kolling ◽  
Marius Braunsdorf ◽  
Suhas Vijayakumar ◽  
Harold Bekkering ◽  
Ivan Toni ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. JN-RM-0392-21
Author(s):  
Paula Kaanders ◽  
Hamed Nili ◽  
Jill X. O’Reilly ◽  
Laurence T. Hunt

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ke Zhang ◽  
Jintao Sun ◽  
Yulei Sun ◽  
Kai Niu ◽  
Pengfei Wang ◽  
...  

Objective: This study aims to investigate the differences between antiepileptic drug (AED) responders and nonresponders among patients with childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) using magnetoencephalography (MEG) and to additionally evaluate whether the neuromagnetic signals of the brain neurons were correlated with the response to therapy.Methods: Twenty-four drug-naïve patients were subjected to MEG under six frequency bandwidths during ictal periods. The source location and functional connectivity were analyzed using accumulated source imaging and correlation analysis, respectively. All patients were treated with appropriate AED, at least 1 year after their MEG recordings, their outcome was assessed, and they were consequently divided into responders and nonresponders.Results: The source location of the nonresponders was mainly in the frontal cortex at a frequency range of 8–12 and 30–80 Hz, especially 8–12 Hz, while the source location of the nonresponders was mostly in the medial frontal cortex, which was chosen as the region of interest. The nonresponders showed strong positive local frontal connections and deficient anterior and posterior connections at 80–250 Hz.Conclusion: The frontal cortex and especially the medial frontal cortex at α band might be relevant to AED-nonresponsive CAE patients. The local frontal positive epileptic network at 80–250 Hz in our study might further reveal underlying cerebral abnormalities even before treatment in CAE patients, which could cause them to be nonresponsive to AED. One single mechanism cannot explain AED resistance; the nonresponders may represent a subgroup of CAE who is refractory to several antiepileptic drugs.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongzheng Fu ◽  
Danielle Beam ◽  
Jeffrey M. Chung ◽  
Chrystal M. Reed ◽  
Adam N. Mamelak ◽  
...  

Flexibly adapting behavior to achieve a desired goal depends on the ability to monitor one's own performance. A key open question is how performance monitoring can be both highly flexible to support multiple tasks and specialized to support specific tasks. We characterized performance monitoring representations by recording single neurons in the human medial frontal cortex (MFC). Subjects performed two tasks that involve three types of cognitive conflict. Neural population representations of conflict, error and control demand generalized across tasks and time while at the same time also encoding task specialization. This arose from a combination of single neurons whose responses were task-invariant and non-linearly mixed. Neurons encoding conflict ex-post served to iteratively update internal estimates of control demand as predicted by a Bayesian model. These findings reveal how the MFC representation of evaluative signals are both abstract and specific, suggesting a mechanism for computing and maintaining control demand estimates across trials and tasks.


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