Functional connectivity of task context representations in prefrontal nodes of the multiple demand network

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Functional connectivity of task context representations in prefrontal nodes of the multiple demand network. / Stiers, Peter; Goulas, Alexandros.

in: BRAIN STRUCT FUNCT, Jahrgang 223, Nr. 5, 06.2018, S. 2455-2473.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{e8770bd516e2417dbc07fd0046343e2e,
title = "Functional connectivity of task context representations in prefrontal nodes of the multiple demand network",
abstract = "A subset of regions in the lateral and medial prefrontal cortex and the anterior insula increase their activity level whenever a cognitive task becomes more demanding, regardless of the specific nature of this demand. During execution of a task, these areas and the surrounding cortex temporally encode aspects of the task context in spatially distributed patterns of activity. It is not clear whether these patterns reflect underlying anatomical subnetworks that still exist when task execution has finished. We use fMRI in 12 participants performing alternating blocks of three cognitive tasks to address this question. A first data set is used to define multiple demand regions in each participant. A second dataset from the same participants is used to determine multiple demand voxel assemblies with a preference for one task over the others. We then show that these voxels remain functionally coupled during execution of non-preferred tasks and that they exhibit stronger functional connectivity during rest. This indicates that the assemblies of task preference sharing voxels reflect patterns of underlying anatomical connections. Moreover, we show that voxels preferring the same task have more similar whole brain functional connectivity profiles that are consistent across participants. This suggests that voxel assemblies differ in patterns of input-output connections, most likely reflecting task demand-specific information exchange.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Peter Stiers and Alexandros Goulas",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s00429-018-1638-9",
language = "English",
volume = "223",
pages = "2455--2473",
journal = "BRAIN STRUCT FUNCT",
issn = "1863-2653",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Functional connectivity of task context representations in prefrontal nodes of the multiple demand network

AU - Stiers, Peter

AU - Goulas, Alexandros

PY - 2018/6

Y1 - 2018/6

N2 - A subset of regions in the lateral and medial prefrontal cortex and the anterior insula increase their activity level whenever a cognitive task becomes more demanding, regardless of the specific nature of this demand. During execution of a task, these areas and the surrounding cortex temporally encode aspects of the task context in spatially distributed patterns of activity. It is not clear whether these patterns reflect underlying anatomical subnetworks that still exist when task execution has finished. We use fMRI in 12 participants performing alternating blocks of three cognitive tasks to address this question. A first data set is used to define multiple demand regions in each participant. A second dataset from the same participants is used to determine multiple demand voxel assemblies with a preference for one task over the others. We then show that these voxels remain functionally coupled during execution of non-preferred tasks and that they exhibit stronger functional connectivity during rest. This indicates that the assemblies of task preference sharing voxels reflect patterns of underlying anatomical connections. Moreover, we show that voxels preferring the same task have more similar whole brain functional connectivity profiles that are consistent across participants. This suggests that voxel assemblies differ in patterns of input-output connections, most likely reflecting task demand-specific information exchange.

AB - A subset of regions in the lateral and medial prefrontal cortex and the anterior insula increase their activity level whenever a cognitive task becomes more demanding, regardless of the specific nature of this demand. During execution of a task, these areas and the surrounding cortex temporally encode aspects of the task context in spatially distributed patterns of activity. It is not clear whether these patterns reflect underlying anatomical subnetworks that still exist when task execution has finished. We use fMRI in 12 participants performing alternating blocks of three cognitive tasks to address this question. A first data set is used to define multiple demand regions in each participant. A second dataset from the same participants is used to determine multiple demand voxel assemblies with a preference for one task over the others. We then show that these voxels remain functionally coupled during execution of non-preferred tasks and that they exhibit stronger functional connectivity during rest. This indicates that the assemblies of task preference sharing voxels reflect patterns of underlying anatomical connections. Moreover, we show that voxels preferring the same task have more similar whole brain functional connectivity profiles that are consistent across participants. This suggests that voxel assemblies differ in patterns of input-output connections, most likely reflecting task demand-specific information exchange.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1007/s00429-018-1638-9

DO - 10.1007/s00429-018-1638-9

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 29502145

VL - 223

SP - 2455

EP - 2473

JO - BRAIN STRUCT FUNCT

JF - BRAIN STRUCT FUNCT

SN - 1863-2653

IS - 5

ER -