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Top down attentional deficits in macaques with lesions of lateral prefrontal cortex.

Rossi AF et al.

The Journal of Neuroscience. 2007 Oct 17; 27(42):11306-11314

https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2939-07.2007PMID: 17942725

Classifications

  • Confirmation
  • New Finding

Evaluations

Very Good
25 Oct 2007
Susan Courtney
Susan Courtney

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This study clearly demonstrates the necessity of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) in achieving rapid switches of selective attention based on an instructional cue. The design cleverly separates this ability from selective attention, generally, by comparison to a pop-out task. Furthermore, the additional finding that the monkeys were able to eventually switch attention after approximately 100 trials, suggests that there is an additional mechanism outside of the PFC (perhaps implicit learning through feedback) for biasing selective attention that does not depend on stimulus salience. The results provide insight regarding what may be a common component process underlying many of the complex behavioral deficits following frontal lobe lesions in humans.

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Relevant Specialties

  • Bioinformatics, Biomedical Informatics & Computational Biology

    Theoretical & Computational Neuroscience
  • Molecular Medicine

    Neurobiology of Disease & Regeneration
  • Neuroscience

    Behavioral Neuroscience | Cognitive Neuroscience | Neurobiology of Disease & Regeneration | Theoretical & Computational Neuroscience
  • Psychology

    Behavioral Neuroscience | Cognitive Neuroscience

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