Abstract
Neural activity within the default mode network (DMN) is widely assumed to relate to processing during off-task states, however it remains unclear whether this association emerges from a shared role in self or social content that is common in these conditions. In the current study, we examine the possibility that the role of the DMN in ongoing thought emerges from contributions to specific features of off-task experience such as self-relevant or social content. A group of participants described their experiences while performing a laboratory task over a period of days. In a different session, neural activity was measured while participants performed Self/Other judgements (e.g., Does the word ‘Honest’ apply to you (Self condition) or Barack Obama (Other condition)). Despite the prominence of social and personal content in off-task reports, there was no association with neural activity during off-task trait adjective judgements. Instead, during both Self and Other judgements we found recruitment of caudal posterior cingulate cortex—a core DMN hub—was above baseline for individuals whose laboratory experiences were characterised as detailed. These data provide little support for a role of the DMN in self or other content in the off-task state and instead suggest a role in how on-going thought is represented.
Highlights
The human mind is not always occupied by our actions in the moment: everyday experience is replete with thoughts that are generated based on representations from memory, rather than events in the here and [1]
While our data are inconsistent with a simple role for the default mode network (DMN) in self-relevant content of offtask thought, they do not exclude a role in broader features of cognition, such as its detail or meaning
A role of the DMN in experiences with high levels of subjective detail draws support from studies probing the mechanics of cognition in tasks, especially those in the domain of memory which are both thought to be related to patterns of ongoing thought (e.g. [19])
Summary
The human mind is not always occupied by our actions in the moment: everyday experience is replete with thoughts that are generated based on representations from memory, rather than events in the here and [1]. Since the turn of the century, an increasing experimental focus on states of self-generated thought, often under the rubric of mind-wandering [2] has revealed links with health, well-being and productivity [3]. This research endeavour has been enhanced and supported by the discovery of the default mode network (DMN), a distributed set of regions spanning medial and lateral, frontal, parietal and temporal cortices [4]. A re-examination of the role of the DMN in off-task thought
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