Brain imaging of the central executive component of working memory.

Neurosci Biobehav Rev

Neuropsychology Unit, University of Liège, Blvd du Rectorat 3 (B33), 4000 Liege (Sart-Tilman), Belgium.

Published: March 2002

This review presents neuroimaging studies which have explored the cerebral substrates of the central executive component of the working memory model proposed by Baddeley and Hitch [Working memory (1986); Recent advances in learning and motivation (1974)]. These studies have demonstrated that different executive functions (manipulating and updating of information, dual-task coordination, inhibition and shifting processes) not only recruit various frontal areas, but also depend upon posterior (mainly parietal) regions. Such results are in agreement with the hypothesis that executive functions rely on a distributed cerebral network not restricted to anterior cerebral areas. Moreover, the intervention of similar prefrontal regions in a large number of executive tasks suggests that the central executive functioning must be understood in terms of different interactions between a network of regions rather than in terms of a specific association between one region and one higher-level cognitive process.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0149-7634(01)00063-xDOI Listing

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