Abstract

Inhibition of inappropriate, habitual or prepotent responses is an essential component of executive control and a cornerstone of self-control. Via the hyperdirect pathway, the subthalamic nucleus (STN) receives inputs from frontal areas involved in inhibition and executive control. Evidence is reviewed from our own work and the literature suggesting that in Parkinson's disease (PD), deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the STN has an impact on executive control during attention-demanding tasks or in situations of conflict when habitual or prepotent responses have to be inhibited. These results support a role for the STN in an inter-related set of processes: switching from automatic to controlled processing, inhibitory and executive control, adjusting response thresholds and influencing speed-accuracy trade-offs. Such STN DBS-induced deficits in inhibitory and executive control may contribute to some of the psychiatric problems experienced by a proportion of operated cases after STN DBS surgery in PD. However, as no direct evidence for such a link is currently available, there is a need to provide direct evidence for such a link between STN DBS-induced deficits in inhibitory and executive control and post-surgical psychiatric complications experienced by operated patients.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the most typical basal ganglia disorder

  • The work of Hershey and colleagues suggests that such subthalamic nucleus (STN) deep brain stimulation (DBS) induced deficits in action restraint on the go no go task were only present when the response was prepotent (83% target rate) but not when there were fewer go trials (50%) which reduced the prepotency of the response

  • This group’s subsequent work suggests that stimulation through the ventrally located contacts of the implanted electrodes is associated with reduced discriminability in the go no go task (Hershey et al, 2010)

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Summary

Marjan Jahanshahi*

Evidence is reviewed from our own work and the literature suggesting that in Parkinson’s disease (PD), deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the STN has an impact on executive control during attention-demanding tasks or in situations of conflict when habitual or prepotent responses have to be inhibited. These results support a role for the STN in an inter-related set of processes: switching from automatic to controlled processing, inhibitory and executive control, adjusting response thresholds and influencing speed-accuracy trade-offs.

INTRODUCTION
Memory guided saccades Stop signal RT task Stop signal RT task
Findings
Eriksen flanker task
Full Text
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