The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is known to make fundamental contributions to executive functions. However, the precise nature of these contributions is incompletely understood. We focused on a specific executive function, inhibition, the ability to suppress a pre-potent response. Functional imaging and animal studies have studied inhibition. However, there are only few lesion studies, typically reporting discrepant findings. For the first time, we conducted cognitive and neuroimaging investigations on patients with focal unilateral PFC lesions across two widely used inhibitory tasks requiring a verbal response: The Hayling Part 2 and Stroop Colour-Word Tests. We systematically explored the relationship between inhibition, fluid intelligence and lesion location using voxel-based lesion symptom mapping (VLSM). We found that PFC patients were significantly impaired compared with healthy comparison group (HC) on both suppression measures of the Hayling and on the Stroop, even when performance on a fluid intelligence test was covaried. No significant relationship was found between patients' performance on each Hayling suppression measure and the Stroop, once fluid intelligence was partialled out, suggesting that the two tests may involve different kinds of inhibition. After accounting for fluid intelligence, we found a significant interaction between tests, Hayling or Stroop, and site, left or right, of PFC damage. This finding suggesting lateralized functional organization was complemented and extended by our VLSM results. We found that performance on both Hayling suppression measures significantly relied on the integrity of a similar and relatively circumscribed region within the right lateral PFC, in the right lateral superior and middle frontal gyri. In stark contrast, performance on the Stroop relies on the integrity of left lateral superior and middle frontal gyri. Thus, lesion location, right or left PFC, is critical in producing impairments on two inhibitory tasks loading similarly on verbal control. This suggests that the two suppression measures of the Hayling and the Stroop are likely to assess dissociable components of executive functions, related to anatomically defined and lateralized PFC circuits. Our findings also suggest that inhibition may actually comprise qualitatively different forms with different neural substrates. This has clinical implications for the diagnosis and treatment of disinhibition impairments, a common behavioural problem caused by PFC lesions. Our results highlight the need to assess inhibition using a variety of tasks and to develop different types of treatments.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.09.018 | DOI Listing |
Brain Struct Funct
May 2024
Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Brisbane, Australia.
Although many executive function screens have been developed, it is not yet clear whether these assessments are equally effective in detecting post-stroke deficits of initiation and inhibition. This study presents a comparative analysis of the Stroop and Hayling tests aiming to evaluate whether these tests measure the same underlying cognitive functions and to identify the neural correlates of the deficits detected by both tasks. Sixty six stroke survivors and 70 healthy ageing controls completed the Hayling and Stroop tests.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Aging Neurosci
February 2023
Department of Life Sciences, Division of Psychology, Centre for Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience (CCN), College of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Brunel University London, Uxbridge, United Kingdom.
A prominent feature of cognitive aging is the decline of executive function (EF) abilities. Numerous studies have reported that older adults perform poorer than younger adults in such tasks. In this cross-sectional study, the effect of age on four EFs, inhibition, shifting, updating, and dual-tasking, was examined in 26 young adults (mean 21.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Exp Neuropsychol
February 2022
Univ Angers, Université de Nantes, LPPL, SFR Confluences, Angers, France.
Objective: Conflicting evidence has arisen from the few correlational studies that have examined the relationship between the ability to decode social emotional cues through the eyes and executive functions in individuals with prefrontal cortex damage. The objective of the current study was (1) to investigate the impact of both focal prefrontal and parietal cortex damage on both of these domains; (2) to examine whether impaired ability to decode social emotion cues through the eyes was predicted by executive function deficits and; (3) to explore the neural correlates of both of these components.
Method: Thirty individuals with prefrontal cortex damage, 15 individuals with parietal cortex damage and 30 matched healthy comparison subjects were subjected to a battery of executive tasks assessing inhibition, flexibility, and planning processes and the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Task (RMET) assessing ability to decode social emotion cues through the eyes.
Laryngoscope
April 2022
The Ear, Nose, Throat and Plastic Surgery Associates, Winter Park, Florida, U.S.A.
Objectives/hypothesis: We hypothesize that treating hearing loss through cochlear implantation in older adults will improve cognitive function.
Study Design: Prospective, interventional study.
Methods: Thirty-seven participants aged 65 years and older who met criteria for cochlear implantation were enrolled.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol
August 2020
Community Brain Injury and Adult Neuropsychology Poole Hospital, Dorset Healthcare University NHS Foundation Trust, Poole, UK.
Objective: The Fist-Edge-Palm task is a motor sequencing task believed to be sensitive to frontal lobe impairment. The present study aimed to investigate the inhibitory processes underlying successful execution of this task.
Method: Seventy-two healthy participants were asked to perform the Fist-Edge-Palm task paced at 120 bpms, 60 bpms and self-paced.
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