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Functional Fractionation of the Cingulo-opercular Network: Alerting Insula and Updating Cingulate. | LitMetric

Functional Fractionation of the Cingulo-opercular Network: Alerting Insula and Updating Cingulate.

Cereb Cortex

Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt Vision Research Center, Center for Integrative and Cognitive Neurosciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.

Published: June 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The anterior insula (AI) and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) play distinct roles in processing emotional and neutral stimuli, challenging the idea that they both respond similarly to attention capture.
  • In experiments using fMRI, the AI showed a sustained response to emotional events while responding only briefly to neutral stimuli, whereas the dACC's responses were consistently transient regardless of the emotional content.
  • The study concludes that the AI signals the presence of important events, while the dACC is responsible for adjusting attention settings based on these events.

Article Abstract

The anterior insula (AI) and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) are engaged in various cognitive and affective processes. An influential account posits that the AI and dACC's ubiquitous engagements reflect their role in the transient capture of attention by salient stimuli. Using fMRI here we tested this claim and functionally dissociated these regions. In the first experiment, we compared these regions' responses to emotion-laden and emotion-neutral salient "oddball" movie events. We found that while the AI only responded transiently to the onset and offset of neutral events, its response to affective events was sustained, challenging the transient attention capture account. By contrast, dACC remained transient regardless of event type. A second experiment distinguished the information encoded by these brain regions with the presentation of behaviorally salient events that require either maintaining the current task set or updating to a different one; the AI was found to signal the presence of the behaviorally relevant events, while the dACC was associated with switching of attention settings in response to the events. We conclude that AI and dACC are involved in signaling the presence of potentially or de facto behaviorally significant events and updating internal attention settings in response to these events, respectively.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7963117PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhy130DOI Listing

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