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Effective connectivity in target stimulus processing: a dynamic causal modeling study of visual oddball task

Brázdil M., Mikl M., Marecek R., Krupa P., Rektor I.

. 2007 ; 35 (2) : 827-835.

Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké

Perzistentní odkaz   https://www.medvik.cz/link/bmc07527219
E-zdroje Online

NLK ProQuest Central od 1998-05-01 do Před 2 měsíci
Health & Medicine (ProQuest) od 2002-08-01 do Před 2 měsíci
Psychology Database (ProQuest) od 2002-08-01 do Před 2 měsíci
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources

PURPOSE: To investigate the fundamental connectivity architecture of neural structures involved in the goal-directed processing of target events. METHODS: Twenty healthy volunteers underwent event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while performing a standard oddball task. In the task, two types of visual stimuli - rare (target) and frequent - were randomly presented, and subjects were instructed to mentally count the target stimuli. Dynamic causal modeling (DCM), in combination with Bayes factors was used to compare competing neurophysiological models with different intrinsic connectivity structures and input regions within the network of brain regions underlying target stimulus processing. RESULTS: Conventional analysis of fMRI data revealed significantly greater activation in response to the target stimuli (in comparison to the frequent stimuli) in several brain regions, including the intraparietal sulci and supramarginal gyri, the anterior and posterior cingulate gyri, the inferior and middle frontal gyri, the superior temporal sulcus, the precuneus/cuneus, and the subcortical grey matter (caudate and thalamus). The most extensive cortical activations were found in the right intraparietal sulcus (IPS), the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and the right lateral prefrontal cortex (PFC). These three regions were entered into the DCM. A comparison on a group level revealed that the dynamic causal models in which the ACC and alternatively the IPS served as input regions were superior to a model in which the PFC was assumed to receive external inputs. No significant difference was observed between the fully connected models with ACC and IPS as input regions. Subsequent analysis of the intrinsic connectivity within two investigated models (IPS and ACC) disclosed significant parallel forward connections from the IPS to the frontal areas and from the ACC to the PFC and the IPS. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that during target stimulus processing there is a bidirectional frontoparietal information flow, very likely reflecting parallel activation of two distinct but partially overlapping attentional or attentional/event-encoding neural systems. Additionally, a simple hierarchy within the right frontal lobe is suggested with the ACC exerting influence over the PFC.

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