Abstract

Nine previous positron emission tomography (PET) studies of human visual information processing were reanalyzed to determine the consistency across experiments of blood flow decreases during active tasks relative to passive viewing of the same stimulus array. Areas showing consistent decreases during active tasks included posterior cingulate/precuneous (Brodmann area, BA 31/7), left (BAS 40 and 39/19) and right (BA 40) inferior parietal cortex, left dorsolateral frontal cortex (BA S), left lateral inferior frontal cortex (BA 10/47), left inferior temporal gyrus @A 20), a strip of medial frontal regions running along a dorsal-ventral axis (BAs 8, 9, 10, and 32), and the right amygdala. Experiments involving language-related processes tended to show larger decreases than nonlanguage experiments. This trend mainly reflected blood flow increases at certain areas in the passive conditions of the language experiments (relative to a fixation control in which no task stimulus was present) and slight blood flow decreases in the passive conditions of the nonlanguage experiments. When the active tasks were referenced to the fixation condition, the overall size of blood flow decreases in language and nonlanguage tasks were the same, but differences were found across cortical areas. Decreases were more pronounced in the posterior cingulate/precuneous (BAS 31/7) and right inferior parietal cortex (BA 40) during language-related tasks and more pronounced in left inferior frontal cortex (BA 10/47) during nonlanguage tasks. Blood flow decreases did not generally show significant differences across the active task states within an experiment, but a verb-generation task produced larger decreases than a read task in right and left inferior parietal lobe (BA 40) and the posterior cingulate/precuneous (BA 31/7), while the read task produced larger decreases in left lateral inferior frontal cortex (BA 10/47). These effects mirrored those found between experiments in the language-nonlanguage comparison. Consistent active minus passive decreases may reflect decreased activity caused by active task processes that generalize over tasks or increased activity caused by passive task processes that are suspended during the active tasks. Increased activity during the passive condition might reflect ongoing processes, such as unconstrained verbally mediated thoughts and monitoring of the external environment, body, and emotional state.

Highlights

  • Task-dependent increases in cerebral blood flow are often demonstrated by comparing an active task to a passive condition in which the same stimulus is presented but the subject is not given a task

  • The reliability of the blood flow decreases in an overall megaimage that averaged active minus passive scan pairs across all experiments was determined

  • Following a summary of the results, this section discusses (1) the effects of several correlated variables on decreases in order to isolate the critical variables,(2) the methodological implications of the results, (3) a nonfunctional explanation of decreases involving the redistribution of the blood supply,(4) a functional explanation related to active task processes, ( 5 ) a functional

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Summary

Introduction

Task-dependent increases in cerebral blood flow are often demonstrated by comparing an active task to a passive condition in which the same stimulus is presented but the subject is not given a task. Large blood flow decreases are observed in active minus passive images (Friston, Frith, Liddle, & Frackowiak, 1991;Haxby et al, 1994).Blood flow increases in a cortical region are usually assumed to reflect increases in neural activity at that region because of the importance of local, interneuronal processing within cortex. Correspondingly,blood flow decreases in a cortical area might reflect decreases in neuronal activity because the cells in that area are either more inhibited or less driven by afferent projections. Performance of a difficult visual discrimination in the presence of distracting auditory transients, for example, might produce inhibition of ongoing activity in auditory areas (Haxby et al, 1994). Friston et al (1991) suggested that tasks involving the intrinsic generation of words increase activity in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, which inhibits superior temporal regions involved in extrinsic word generation

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