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The maintenance of complex visual scenes in working memory may require activation of working memory manipulation circuits in the dlPFC. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortices (dlPFC) are involved in both emotional and cognitive processing, but the interactions between these processes are not well understood.
  • Researchers conducted an fMRI study with participants performing working memory tasks involving letters and images under emotional and non-emotional conditions.
  • Results indicated that while the dlPFC showed activity related to non-emotional tasks, there was no significant BOLD signal during emotional image trials, suggesting that other brain networks may be involved in processing emotional content.

Article Abstract

Past research has shown that the bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortices (dlPFC) are implicated in both emotional processing as well as cognitive processing, in addition to working memory . Exactly how these disparate processes interact with one another within the dlPFC is less understood. To explore this, researchers designed an experiment that looked at working memory performance during fMRI under both emotional and non-emotional task conditions. Participants were asked to complete three tasks (letters, neutral images, emotional images) of the Sternberg Sorting Task under one of two trial conditions (sort or maintain). Regions of interest consisted of the left and right dlPFC as defined by brain masks based on NeuroSynth . Results showed a significant main effect of the 'sort' condition on reaction speed for all three trial types, as well as a main effect of task type (letters) on accuracy. In addition, a significant interaction was found between trial type (sort) and task type (letters), but not for either of the picture tasks. These results reveal a discrepancy between BOLD signal and behavioral data, with no significant difference in BOLD activity during image trials being displayed, despite longer response times for every condition. While these results show that the dlPFC is clearly implicated in non-emotional cognitive processing, more research is needed to explain the lack of BOLD activation seen here for similar emotionally valanced tasks, possibly indicating involvement of other brain networks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10659489PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.11.11.23298415DOI Listing

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