Abstract

Though lesions to frontal cortex can increase susceptibility to interference from previously established but irrelevant memories (“proactive interference”), the specific regions underlying this problem are difficult to determine because the lesions are typically large and heterogeneous. We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate proactive interference in healthy volunteers performing an “AB–AC” paired-associate cued-recall paradigm. At Study, participants intentionally encoded semantically related visual word pairs, which were changed three times (high interference), repeated three times (low interference), or presented only once. At Test, participants were presented with the first word of each pair and attempted to recall its most recent associate from the Study phase. To overcome the problem of image artifacts caused by speech-related head motion, we cued speech during a gap between image acquisitions. Regions in left inferior frontal cortex and bilateral frontopolar cortex showed interference effects during both Study and Test. The pattern of responses in these regions differed, however. Left inferior frontal regions showed mainly reduced responses associated with low interference, whereas frontopolar regions showed mainly increased responses associated with high interference. When incorrect as well as correct trials were analyzed at Test, additional activation associated with high interference was observed in right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. These data suggest that distinct regions within prefrontal cortex subserve different functions in the presence of proactive interference during cued recall.

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