Hemispheric specialization in human prefrontal cortex for resolving certain and uncertain inferences

被引:66
|
作者
Goel, Vinod [1 ]
Tierney, Michael
Sheesley, Laura
Bartolo, Angela
Vartanian, Oshin
Grafman, Jordan
机构
[1] York Univ, Dept Psychol, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada
[2] NINDS, Cognit Neurosci Sect, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
decision making; frontal lobes; indeterminacy; lateralization; lesions; reasoning;
D O I
10.1093/cercor/bhl132
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Uncertainty is a fact of life that must be accommodated in real-world decision making. Although it has been suggested that the right prefrontal cortex (PFC) has a special role to play in decision making under uncertainty, there is very little hard data to support this hypothesis. To better understand the roles of left and right PFCs in reasoning and decision making in situations with complete and incomplete information, we administered simple inference problems to 18 patients with lateralized focal lesions to PFC (9 right hemisphere, 9 left hemisphere) and 22 age- and education-matched normal controls. The stimuli were systematically manipulated for completeness of information regarding the status of the conclusion. Our results demonstrated a 2-way interaction such that patients with left PFC lesions were selectively impaired in trials with complete information, whereas patients with right PFC lesions were selectively impaired in trials with incomplete information. These results provide compelling evidence for hemispheric specialization for reasoning in PFC and suggest that the right PFC has a critical role to play in reasoning about incompletely specified situations. We postulate this role involves the maintenance of ambiguous mental representations that temper premature overinterpretation by the left hemisphere.
引用
收藏
页码:2245 / 2250
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hemispheric specialization in prefrontal cortex: effects of verbalizability, imageability and meaning
    Casasanto, D
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROLINGUISTICS, 2003, 16 (4-5) : 361 - 382
  • [2] Prefrontal cortex hemispheric specialization for categorical and coordinate visual spatial memory
    Slotnick, Scott D.
    Moo, Lauren R.
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2006, 44 (09) : 1560 - 1568
  • [3] Amygdala, prefrontal cortex, and hemispheric specialization in emotional experience and expression.
    Sanchez-Navarro, Juan Pedro
    Roman, Francisco
    [J]. ANALES DE PSICOLOGIA, 2004, 20 (02): : 223 - 240
  • [4] Invariant visual-recognition learning in monkey: Effect of hemispheric specialization of the prefrontal cortex
    Dudkin, K. N.
    Chueva, I. V.
    Makarov, F. N.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2008, 69 (03) : 140 - 140
  • [5] The Scale of Functional Specialization within Human Prefrontal Cortex
    Gilbert, Sam J.
    Henson, Richard N. A.
    Simons, Jon S.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 30 (04): : 1233 - 1237
  • [6] Human primary motor cortex shows hemispheric specialization for speech
    Terumitsu, Makoto
    Fujii, Yukihiko
    Suzuki, Kiyotaka
    Kwee, Ingrid L.
    Nakada, Tsutomu
    [J]. NEUROREPORT, 2006, 17 (11) : 1091 - 1095
  • [7] Hemispheric specialization of the lateral prefrontal cortex for strategic processing during spatial and shape working memory
    Manoach, DS
    White, NS
    Lindgren, KA
    Heckers, S
    Coleman, MJ
    Dubal, S
    Holzman, PS
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2004, 21 (03) : 894 - 903
  • [8] Hemispheric asymmetry in human lateral prefrontal cortex during cognitive set shifting
    Konishi, S
    Hayashi, T
    Uchida, I
    Kikyo, H
    Takahashi, E
    Miyashita, Y
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (11) : 7803 - 7808
  • [9] Specialization in the left prefrontal cortex for sentence comprehension
    Hashimoto, R
    Sakai, KL
    [J]. NEURON, 2002, 35 (03) : 589 - 597
  • [10] Revisiting human hemispheric specialization with neuroimaging
    Herve, Pierre-Yves
    Zago, Laure
    Petit, Laurent
    Mazoyer, Bernard
    Tzourio-Mazoyer, Nathalie
    [J]. TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2013, 17 (02) : 69 - 80