Background: Lesions of the frontal lobes may impair the capacity of patients to control otherwise intact cognitive operations in the face of ambiguous sensory input or conflicting possible responses. Objective: To address the question of whether focal lesions in different regions of the frontal lobes produced specific impairments in cognitive control. Methods: We evaluated 42 patients with chronic frontal lesions and 38 control subjects on a modified Stroop test that allowed measurement of reaction times and errors. Planned, stratified analyses permitted identification of discrete frontal lesions that are critical for impaired performance. Results: Lesions of the left ventrolateral region produced an increased number of incorrect responses to distractors. Lesions of a large portion of the right superior medial region, including anterior cingulate, supplementary motor area (SMA), pre-SMA, and dorsolateral areas, caused a slow reaction time and a decreased number of correct responses to targets. Conclusion: Lesions in two distinct frontal regions impair cognitive control for a Stroop task, and the mechanisms of impairment are specific to the region of injury. This is support for a general proposal that the supervisory system is constructed of distinct subsystems.

Regional frontal injuries cause distinct impairments in cognitive control / Alexander, M. P.; Stuss, D. T.; Picton, T.; Shallice, T.; Gillingham, S.. - In: NEUROLOGY. - ISSN 0028-3878. - 68:18(2007), pp. 1515-1523. [10.1212/01.wnl.0000261482.99569.fb]

Regional frontal injuries cause distinct impairments in cognitive control

Shallice, T.;
2007-01-01

Abstract

Background: Lesions of the frontal lobes may impair the capacity of patients to control otherwise intact cognitive operations in the face of ambiguous sensory input or conflicting possible responses. Objective: To address the question of whether focal lesions in different regions of the frontal lobes produced specific impairments in cognitive control. Methods: We evaluated 42 patients with chronic frontal lesions and 38 control subjects on a modified Stroop test that allowed measurement of reaction times and errors. Planned, stratified analyses permitted identification of discrete frontal lesions that are critical for impaired performance. Results: Lesions of the left ventrolateral region produced an increased number of incorrect responses to distractors. Lesions of a large portion of the right superior medial region, including anterior cingulate, supplementary motor area (SMA), pre-SMA, and dorsolateral areas, caused a slow reaction time and a decreased number of correct responses to targets. Conclusion: Lesions in two distinct frontal regions impair cognitive control for a Stroop task, and the mechanisms of impairment are specific to the region of injury. This is support for a general proposal that the supervisory system is constructed of distinct subsystems.
2007
68
18
1515
1523
Alexander, M. P.; Stuss, D. T.; Picton, T.; Shallice, T.; Gillingham, S.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/30500
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