journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38527070/moving-and-static-faces-bodies-objects-and-scenes-are-differentially-represented-across-the-three-visual-pathways
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emel Küçük, Matthew Foxwell, Daniel Kaiser, David Pitcher
Models of human cortex propose the existence of neuroanatomical pathways specialized for different behavioral functions. These pathways include a ventral pathway for object recognition, a dorsal pathway for performing visually guided physical actions, and a recently proposed third pathway for social perception. In the current study, we tested the hypothesis that different categories of moving stimuli are differentially processed across the dorsal and third pathways according to their behavioral implications...
March 22, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38527069/roles-of-the-default-mode-network-in-different-aspects-of-self-representation-when-remembering-social-autobiographical-memories
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Azusa Katsumi, Saeko Iwata, Takashi Tsukiura
Autobiographical memory (AM) is episodic memory for personally experienced events, in which self-representation is more important than that in laboratory-based memory. Theoretically, self-representation in a social context is categorized as the interpersonal self (IS) referred to in a social interaction with a person or the social-valued self (SS) based on the reputation of the self in the surrounding society. Although functional neuroimaging studies have demonstrated the involvement of the default mode network (DMN) in self-representation, little is known about how the DMN subsystems contribute differentially to IS-related and SS-related AMs...
March 22, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437192/impact-of-monocular-retinal-lesions-on-blob-size-in-adult-human-v1
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marco Marcondes, Mariana F Farias, Luis F Pary, Mario Fiorani, Bruss Lima, Ana Karla J Amorim, Ricardo Gattass
We studied the attributes of cytochrome c oxidase (CytOx)-rich blobs and ocular dominance columns (OD) in human V1 associated with monocular retinal lesions. Interblob distance, blob cross-sectional area, OD width, and OD arrangement pattern were analyzed in CytOx-reacted tangential sections of flat-mounted V1 preparations. Monocular deprivation induces differential expression of CytOx in the corresponding ODs in V1. We were thereby able to identify the V1 regions associated with the lesioned area in the retina, assign which OD was associated with each eye, and assign the corresponding blob in Layer III as deprived or nondeprived of visual input...
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437186/behavioral-bias-for-exploration-is-associated-with-enhanced-signaling-in-the-lateral-and-medial-frontopolar-cortex
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lasse Güldener, Stefan Pollmann
Should we keep doing what we know works for us, or should we risk trying something new as it could work even better? The exploration-exploitation dilemma is ubiquitous in daily life decision-making, and balancing between the two is crucial for adaptive behavior. Yet, we only have started to unravel the neurocognitive mechanisms that help us to find this balance in practice. Analyzing BOLD signals of healthy young adults during virtual foraging, we could show that a behavioral tendency for prolonged exploitation was associated with weakened signaling during exploration in central node points of the frontoparietal attention network, plus the frontopolar cortex...
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437176/the-role-of-letter-speech-sound-integration-in-native-and-second-language-reading-a-study-in-native-japanese-readers-learning-english
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dongyang Yan, Ayumi Seki
The automatic activation of letter-speech sound (L-SS) associations is a vital step in typical reading acquisition. However, the contribution of L-SS integration during nonalphabetic native and alphabetic second language (L2) reading remains unclear. This study explored whether L-SS integration plays a similar role in a nonalphabetic language as in alphabetic languages and its contribution to L2 reading among native Japanese-speaking adults with varying English proficiency. A priming paradigm in Japanese and English was performed by presenting visual letters or symbols, followed by auditory sounds...
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437175/lesion-symptom-mapping-of-acceptability-judgments-in-chronic-poststroke-aphasia-reveals-the-neurobiological-underpinnings-of-receptive-syntax
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Danielle Fahey, Julius Fridriksson, Gregory Hickok, William Matchin
Disagreements persist regarding the neural basis of syntactic processing, which has been linked both to inferior frontal and posterior temporal regions of the brain. One focal point of the debate concerns the role of inferior frontal areas in receptive syntactic ability, which is mostly assessed using sentence comprehension involving complex syntactic structures, a task that is potentially confounded with working memory. Syntactic acceptability judgments may provide a better measure of receptive syntax by reducing the need to use high working memory load and complex sentences and by enabling assessment of various types of syntactic violations...
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437174/investigating-the-effect-of-contextual-cueing-with-face-stimuli-on-electrophysiological-measures-in-younger-and-older-adults
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Boglárka Nagy, Petia Kojouharova, Andrea B Protzner, Zsófia Anna Gaál
Extracting repeated patterns from our surroundings plays a crucial role in contextualizing information, making predictions and guiding our behavior implicitly. Previous research showed that contextual cueing enhances visual search performance in younger adults. In this study, we investigated whether contextual cueing could also improve older adults' performance and whether age-related differences in the neural processes underlying implicit contextual learning could be detected. Twenty-four younger and 25 older participants performed a visual search task with contextual cueing...
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437172/erratum
#28
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437171/eeg-spectral-power-volatility-predicts-problem-solving-outcomes
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuhua Yu, Yongtaek Oh, John Kounios, Mark Beeman
Temporal variability is a fundamental property of brain processes and is functionally important to human cognition. This study examined how fluctuations in neural oscillatory activity are related to problem-solving performance as one example of how temporal variability affects high-level cognition. We used volatility to assess step-by-step fluctuations of EEG spectral power while individuals attempted to solve word-association puzzles. Inspired by recent results with hidden-state modeling, we tested the hypothesis that spectral-power volatility is directly associated with problem-solving outcomes...
March 3, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38358008/entities-uncertainties-and-behavioral-indicators-of-consciousness
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
L Syd M Johnson
Two problems related to the identification of consciousness are the distribution problem-or how and among which entities consciousness is distributed in the world-and the moral status problem-or which species, entities, and individuals have moral status. The use of inferences from neurobiological and behavioral evidence, and their confounds, for identifying consciousness in nontypically functioning humans, nonhuman animals, and artificial intelligence is considered in light of significant scientific uncertainty and ethical biases, with implications for both problems...
February 12, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38358004/auditory-processing-of-intonational-rises-and-falls-in-german-rises-are-special-in-attention-orienting
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Lialiou, Martine Grice, Christine T Röhr, Petra B Schumacher
This article investigates the processing of intonational rises and falls when presented unexpectedly in a stream of repetitive auditory stimuli. It examines the neurophysiological correlates (ERPs) of attention to these unexpected stimuli through the use of an oddball paradigm where sequences of repetitive stimuli are occasionally interspersed with a deviant stimulus, allowing for elicitation of a MMN. Whereas previous oddball studies on attention toward unexpected sounds involving pitch rises were conducted on nonlinguistic stimuli, the present study uses as stimuli lexical items in German with naturalistic intonation contours...
February 12, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38357989/bilingual-language-control-in-the-brain-evidence-from-structural-and-effective-functional-brain-connectivity
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gongting Wang, Lily Tao
Experience in bilingual language control is often accompanied by changes in the structure and function of the brain. Brain structural changes are also often closely related to changes in functions. Previous studies, however, have not directly explored the relationship between structural connectivity and effective functional connectivity of the brain during bilingual language control, and whether the two types of connectivity are associated with behavioral performance of language control. Using behavioral performance, functional, and diffusion imaging techniques, we found that: (1) during language control, the left dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), left caudate nucleus (CN), inferior parietal lobe, precuneus, and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC)/pre-SMA were significantly activated...
February 12, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38357932/neural-mechanisms-determining-the-duration-of-task-free-self-paced-visual-perception
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shira Baror, Thomas J Baumgarten, Biyu J He
Humans spend hours each day spontaneously engaging with visual content, free from specific tasks and at their own pace. Currently, the brain mechanisms determining the duration of self-paced perceptual behavior remain largely unknown. Here, participants viewed naturalistic images under task-free settings and self-paced each image's viewing duration while undergoing EEG and pupillometry recordings. Across two independent data sets, we observed large inter- and intra-individual variability in viewing duration...
February 12, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38330177/alpha-oscillations-and-temporal-binding-windows-in-perception-a-critical-review-and-best-practice-guidelines
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan-Mathijs Schoffelen, Ugo Giulio Pesci, Uta Noppeney
An intriguing question in cognitive neuroscience is whether alpha oscillations shape how the brain transforms the continuous sensory inputs into distinct percepts. According to the alpha temporal resolution hypothesis, sensory signals arriving within a single alpha cycle are integrated, whereas those in separate cycles are segregated. Consequently, shorter alpha cycles should be associated with smaller temporal binding windows and higher temporal resolution. However, the evidence supporting this hypothesis is contentious, and the neural mechanisms remain unclear...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38319895/nonfrontal-control-of-working-memory
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Christophel, Simon Weber, Chang Yan, Lee Stopak, Stefan Hetzer, John-Dylan Haynes
Items held in visual working memory can be quickly updated, replaced, removed, and even manipulated in accordance with current behavioral goals. Here, we use multivariate pattern analyses to identify the patterns of neuronal activity that realize the executive control processes supervising these flexible stores. We find that portions of the middle temporal gyrus and the intraparietal sulcus represent what item is cued for continued memorization independently of representations of the item itself. Importantly, this selection-specific activity could not be explained by sensory representations of the cue and is only present when control is exerted...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38319891/eeg-searchlight-decoding-reveals-person-and-place-specific-responses-for-semantic-category-and-familiarity
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea Bruera, Massimo Poesio
Proper names are linguistic expressions referring to unique entities, such as individual people or places. This sets them apart from other words like common nouns, which refer to generic concepts. And yet, despite both being individual entities, one's closest friend and one's favorite city are intuitively associated with very different pieces of knowledge-face, voice, social relationship, autobiographical experiences for the former, and mostly visual and spatial information for the latter. Neuroimaging research has revealed the existence of both domain-general and domain-specific brain correlates of semantic processing of individual entities; however, it remains unclear how such commonalities and similarities operate over a fine-grained temporal scale...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38319889/metacognitive-awareness-and-the-subjective-experience-of-remembering-in-aphantasia
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael J Siena, Jon S Simons
Individuals with aphantasia, a nonclinical condition typically characterized by mental imagery deficits, often report reduced episodic memory. However, findings have hitherto rested largely on subjective self-reports, with few studies experimentally investigating both objective and subjective aspects of episodic memory in aphantasia. In this study, we tested both aspects of remembering in aphantasic individuals using a custom 3-D object and spatial memory task that manipulated visuospatial perspective, which is considered to be a key factor determining the subjective experience of remembering...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38319886/a-machine-learning-study-of-anxiety-related-symptoms-and-error-related-brain-activity
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Grabowska, Filip Sondej, Magdalena Senderecka
Changes in error processing are observable in a range of anxiety-related disorders. Numerous studies, however, have reported contradictory and nonreplicating findings, thus the exact mapping of brain response to errors (i.e., error-related negativity [ERN]; error-related positivity, Pe) onto specific anxiety symptoms remains unclear. In this study, we collected 16 self-reported scores of anxiety dimensions and obtained spatial features of EEG recordings from 171 individuals. We then used machine learning to (1) identify symptoms that are central for elevated ERN/Pe and (2) estimate the generalizability of traditional statistical approaches...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38319885/multiplexed-levels-of-cognitive-control-through-delta-and-theta-neural-oscillations
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mattia F Pagnotta, Justin Riddle, Mark D'Esposito
Cognitive control allows behavior to be guided according to environmental contexts and internal goals. During cognitive control tasks, fMRI analyses typically reveal increased activation in frontal and parietal networks, and EEG analyses reveal increased amplitude of neural oscillations in the delta/theta band (2-3, 4-7 Hz) in frontal electrodes. Previous studies proposed that theta-band activity reflects the maintenance of rules associating stimuli to appropriate actions (i.e., the rule set), whereas delta synchrony is specifically associated with the control over the context for when to apply a set of rules (i...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38319683/neural-signatures-of-competition-between-voluntary-and-involuntary-influences-over-the-focus-of-attention-in-visual-working-memory
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yun Ding, Bradley R Postle, Freek van Ede
Adaptive behavior relies on the selection and prioritization of relevant sensory inputs from the external environment as well as from among internal sensory representations held in working memory. Recent behavioral evidence suggests that the classic distinction between voluntary (goal-driven) and involuntary (stimulus-driven) influences over attentional allocation also applies to the selection of internal representations held in working memory. In the current EEG study, we set out to investigate the neural dynamics associated with the competition between voluntary and involuntary control over the focus of attention in visual working memory...
February 2, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
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