Abstract

The human PFC has been associated more with meta-perceptual as opposed to meta-memory decisions from correlational neuroimaging investigations. Recently, metacognitive abilities have also been shown to be causally dependent upon anterior and dorsal PFC in nonhuman primate lesion studies. Two studies, using postdecision wagering paradigms and reversible inactivation, challenged this meta-perceptual versus meta-memory notion and showed that dorsal and anterior prefrontal areas are associated with metamemory for experienced objects and awareness of ignorance, respectively. Causal investigations are important but scarce; nothing is known, for example, about the causal contributions of prefrontal subregions to spatial metamemory. Here, we investigated the effects of dorsal versus ventral PFC lesions on two-alternative forced-choice spatial discrimination tasks in male macaque monkeys. Importantly, we were rigorous in approach and applied three independent but complementary indices used to quantify individual animals' metacognitive ability (“Type II sensitivity”) by two variants of meta-d′/d′ and phi coefficient (φ). Our results were consistent across indices: while neither lesions to superior dorsolateral PFC nor orbitofrontal cortex impaired spatial recognition performance, only monkeys with superior dorsolateral PFC lesions were impaired in meta-accuracy. Together with the observation that the same orbitofrontal cortex lesioned monkeys were impaired in updating rule value in a Wisconsin Card Sorting Test analog, we therefore document a functional double-dissociation between these two PFC regions. Our study presents important causal evidence that other dimensions, namely, domain-specific processing (e.g., spatial vs nonspatial metamemory), also need considerations in understanding the functional specialization in the neural underpinnings of introspection.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This study demonstrates macaque monkeys' metacognitive capability of introspecting its own memory success is causally dependent on intact superior dorsolateral prefrontal cortices but not the orbitofrontal cortices. Combining neurosurgical techniques on monkeys and state-of-the-art measures of metacognition, we affirm a critical role of the PFC in supporting spatial meta-recognition memory and delineate functional specificity within PFC for distinct elements of metacognition.

Highlights

  • Metacognition refers to awareness of one’s own cognition

  • In light of the above and findings that second-order metacognitive processes could be separated from confidence per se (Dotan et al, 2018), we investigated the causal roles of one dorsal and one ventral (OFC) subregion of PFC in spatial recognition memory and hypothesized that the superior dorsolateral PFC (sdlPFC) but not orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) will be causally required for accurate spatial memory introspection

  • We found that sdlPFC, but not OFC, lesioned monkeys were impaired in meta-accuracy in a high spatial memory demand task variant without showing any impairments in spatial recognition performance itself

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Summary

Introduction

Metacognition refers to awareness of one’s own cognition Two recent studies showed that neural activations in dorsal PFC and anterior PFC in the macaque brain are associated with metamemory of

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