Title: Executive processes
1Executive processes
- What are executive processes
- Executive processes coordinate mental activity so
that a particular goal is achieved - modulate operation of other processes (modulate
to guide or modify) however, executive processes
do not actually carry out these activities - Executive processes also called cognitive control
processes
2Executive processes
- Properties of executive processes
- Bias our selection of thoughts and actions
- coordinate mental activity so that a particular
goal is achieved - Override automatic thoughts and habitual actions
- Enables simulation of plans, identification of
consequences
3Executive processes
- Neural basis
- Frontal executive hypothesis executive processes
primarily mediated by the prefrontal cortex (PFC) - PFC anterior to motor cortex (and for some
authors the premotor cortex) - PFC includes dorsolateral PFC, anterior
cingulate, Brocas area, and the medial and
orbital regions of the frontal lobes
4Executive processes
- Neuroanatomy of the Frontal lobes
- Prefrontal cortex massive network that links the
motor, perceptual, and limbic (emotional network)
regions - Limbic system include amygdala, cingulate gyrus,
orbitofrontal cortex and parts of basal ganglia
5Executive processes
- Frontal lobes
- About third of cerebral cortex in humans frontal
lobes are much larger in humans and are much
larger than in other mammals, especially its
anterior aspect - Frontal lobes separated from parietal lobes by
central sulcus and from temporal lobes by lateral
sulcus
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- Frontal lobe
- Major subdivisions of prefrontal cortex lateral
prefrontal cortex, ventromedial prefrontal
cortex, and anterior cingulate - Frontal pole most anterior end of frontal lobes
8Kolb Whishaw frontal lobe figure fyi
- Lateral area 6 premotor cortex
- Medial area 6 supplementary motor cortex
- Area 8 frontal eye field
9Executive processesfyi
- Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (areas 9 and 46)
- Medial frontal cortex (areas 25 and 32)
- Inferior (ventral) prefrontal cortex (areas 11,
12, 13, and 14) also called orbitofrontal cortex
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- Properties of PFC that are crucial for executive
processing - Perceptual, motor, cortical, and subcortical
brain structures project to PFC - This makes it possible to combine information
from diverse sources, thereby enabling complex
behavior - PFC has projections to multiple brain structures
- This permits it to modulate (exert top-down
guidance) on other neural processes
11Executive processes
- Working memory and lateral prefrontal cortex
- A previous lecture discuss working memory
- Baddeleys model of working memory was presented
12Baddeleys working memory model
Visuo-spatial sketchpad
Phonological loop
Central Executive
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- Content-based model of working memory
- Baddeleys model is known as a content-based
model of working memory because it assumes that
different systems represent different content - Phonological stores linguistic info and
visusospatial represents visual and spatial
information - Model based on behavioral data reviewed in prior
lecture
14Executive processes
- Process-based models of working memory
- It has been hypothesized that different regions
of the PFC are recruited to carry out different
tasks - In other words different processes are associated
with different brain regions
15Executive processes
- Test of Content vs process-based models of WM
- In some tasks a participant is presented a
stimulus, then is required to internally maintain
a representation of that stimulus, until a probe
is presented (maintenance condition) - In an n-back task the participant is required to
keep in mind a stream of stimuli and respond only
if the stimulus was presented n-back - Requires maintenance manipulation
16Executive functions
- Illustration of n-back task
- Note, the need to maintain information in memory
and manipulate it
17Executive processes
- DEsposito et al. (1998)
- Meta-analysis
- DEsposito and colleagues performed a
meta-analysis to investigate content-based and
process-based accounts of working memory - Aside meta-analysis quantitative review of
findings from several studies
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- DEsposito et al. (1998)
- One might expect based on the content account of
working memory that the phonological loop might
be left lateralized and the spatial sketchpad
should be right lateralized as it is for
perception - To investigate this possibility DEsposito
categorized studies based on their content
(spatial, nonspatial)
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- DEsposito et al. (1998)
- Results support the hypothesis that spatial tasks
tend to be associated with activation of the
right prefrontal cortex, whereas nonspatial tasks
are associated with activation of the left
prefrontal cortex - However, there was bilateral activation in many
studies - See top panel
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- DEsposito et al. (1998)
- to investigate the process-based account of
working memory, tasks were categorized as
requiring maintenance or maintenance plus
(maintenance manipulation) - Results showed that tasks requiring maintenance
plus had more dorsolateral activation - See bottom panel
21DEsposito et al. (1998)
- Top panel shows active foci for spatial and
nonspatial tasks (content) - Bottom panel shows active foci for maintenance
and maintenance tasks
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- Conclusions
- DEsposito findings are inconclusive, but do
provide support for the hypothesis that
maintenance plus processing occurs in a different
region (dorsolateral PFC) than maintenance
processing - This is consistent with process-based models of WM
23Executive functions
- Stroop test
- This test assesses the ability to maintain a goal
and ignore/suppress habitual (prepotent)
responses, an important executive function
24Executive functions
- Stroop effect demonstration
- in this next slide I want you to name the ink
colours of the words as rapidly as possible
25Stroop (slide 1)
- red yellow blue red
- green red yellow green
- blue green red yellow
- red green red yellow
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- Stroop effect demonstration
- in this next slide I want you to name the ink
colours of the words as rapidly as possible
27Stroop (slide 2)
- red yellow blue red
- green red yellow green
- blue green red yellow
- red green red yellow
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- Stroop effect demonstration
- in this next slide I want you to name the ink
colours of the colour patches as rapidly as
possible
29Stroop (slide 3)
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- Stroop effect
- The increase in time it takes to name of color
when the word name does not match the color
versus naming color patches is called the
color-word interference effect (slide 1
time/slide 3 slide) - Note different versions of the Stroop assess
interference in slightly different ways
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Age Dot time (DT) M (SD) Color word time (CWT) M (SD) Interference CWT/DT Errors Color word M (SD)
18-39 11.0 (2.5) 22.1 (7.2) 2.0 (0.6) 0.8 (1.0)
75-74 13.3 (3.6) 32.6 (9.6) 2.6 (0.9) 0.6 (1.2)
Dot time name dot color color word time name
word color
DT Name color of dot CWT Name color of word
designating color
Troyer, Leach, Strauss (2006), 13, 20-35
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- Stroop effect
- Age effects age significantly increases the
magnitude of the interference effect - Gender differences are not always present in the
interference score - The higher the IQ score the lower the
interference effect
33Executive functions
- Stroop effect
- Standard interpretation of Stroop participant
must selectively attend to the name of the ink
color and ignore the word name (of a color)
34Executive functions
- Wisconsin Card Sort
- Used to assess for executive dysfunction and
frontal lobe damage - 4 stimulus cards are arranged in front of a
participant cards vary on 3 dimensions shape,
color, number - Participants are given a deck of cards and must
match each card with 1 of the stimulus cards, but
are not told on which dimension they are matching - Participants are told right or wrong
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36Executive functions
- Participants are given a deck of cards and must
match each card to 1 of the 4 stimulus cards - Participants guess at first, but since they are
given feedback, they learn the correct attribute - After sorting about 10 cards correctly, the
examiner changes the attribute without warning - Normal participants soon figure out correct
attribute for sorting
37Executive functions
- Frontal lobe patients and normal participants do
not differ in learning first critical trial, but
they differ in the ability to switch attributes - Normal participants switch after a few trials of
negative feedback frontal lobe patients are less
able to switch
38Executive functions
- Executive function needed when multiple
representations in working memory or multiple
processes are competing for control of behavior
and thought - In Stroop task there is competition, but this
sort of competition is a feature of a broad range
of tasks - E.g., it has been shown that naming the color of
a picture of a banana is slowed when it is not
yellow (e.g., red) - An incompatibility between an automatic response
and a correct response results in Stroop-like
effects
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- Stimulus-response compatibility
- Stimulus response compatibility exists when the
response is compatible with the way people would
naturally respond to that stimulus - E.g., high pitch respond up low pitch
respond down - E.g., stimulus presented on left or right side of
display requires a response on same side as
stimulus was presented
40Executive functions
- Stimulus-response compatibility
- Stimulus response compatibility is observed even
when position of object is irrelevant to response
(Simon, 1990) - E.g., suppose task is to make a right-handed
response when a circle is presented and a
left-handed response to a triangle reaction time
is faster when the circle or triangle is
presented on the side of the response - Interpretation when there is an automatic
connection between a stimulus and a response,
little executive attention is required - when 2 sources of information are incompatible,
attention must be paid in order to focus on the
relevant information and inhibit/ignore the
irrelevant information
41Executive functions
- Cohens model of Stroop
- Cohen and colleagues have developed a neural
network model of Stroop task - model proposes that in addition to initial visual
perceptual processing of color (occipital lobes)
and visual words (temporal lobes), two additional
attentional processes are required
42Executive functions
- Cohens model of Stroop
- 1. attention controller
- This process keeps track of the task goal
- necessary because during incompatible trials in
the color word condition, the name of the color
font and the name of the word, which designates a
color are two competing responses
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- Cohens model of Stroop
- 2. conflict monitor
- This process monitors the amount of conflict
between potential responses
44Executive functions
- Stroop effect
- Other points neuroimaging and lesion studies
are consistent with hypothesis that frontal lobes
are associated with Stroop - Data also suggest that performance is mediated by
a more broadly based system
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- Neuroimaging evidence
- Jonides and colleagues (2002) performed a
meta-analysis of Stroop studies and related
studies - Results showed that the anterior cingulate and
dorsolateral PFC were activated - Consistent with Cohen model because it is known
from other research that the anterior cingulate
is activated mediates conflict and the
dorsolateral PFC is involved in executive
attention
46Executive processes
- Executive processes memory for temporal order
- Individuals with PFC damage may be impaired in
their ability to organize temporally events in
memory - Milner (1995) performed a recency experiment in
which participants were required to discriminate
which of two events was presented more recently
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- Memory for temporal order Milner (1995)
- Participants were presented pairs of stimuli
(e.g., 2 pictures of objects) - Every so often a probe card is presented with ?
- Task to choose picture with more recently
presented object
48Executive processes
- Milner (1995) Memory for temporal order
- Experimental condition both objects had been
presented previously - Control condition one picture presented
previously one picture new (Recognition test)
49Executive processes
- Memory for temporal order Milner (1995)
- 3 groups of participants were tested
- Controls
- Unilateral damage to dorsolateral PFC px
- Unilateral damage to temporal px
- Px underwent surgery for relief from focal
epilepsy
50Milner recency discrimination experiment
- Top panel shows stimuli used in expt
- Bottom panel shows that PFC participants were
impaired relative to other 2 groups on recency
discrimination test but not on recognition test
51Executive processes
- Memory for temporal order Milner (1995)
- Other findings this experiment was also
performed with word stimuli - Results showed that the effect was lateralized
- Patients with LHD were more impaired on recency
discrimination when words were used, whereas px
with RHD were more impaired with pictures
52Executive processes
- Memory for temporal order Self-ordered pointing
- Keeping track of previous experienced events
(memory for temporal order) has been examined
using a self-ordered pointing task - In this task participant is presented n card with
n objects depicted on it - The same objects are present on each card but
their order is scrambled from card to card
53Executive processes
- Memory for temporal order Self-ordered pointing
- Task of participant is to point to the a
different object on each card (one that hasnt
yet been pointed to) - Results
- Frontal lobe patients made more errors than
controls discrepency between 2 groups increased
with n, the number of objects and cards
54Executive processes
- Source memory
- Source memory refers to when we learned a fact or
the context in which a fact was learned e.g.,
who told you fact or in what context you viewed a
face - Source memory appears to require frontal lobe
function
55Executive processes
- Source memory
- Janowsky, Shimamura, Squire (1999)
- In this experiment participants were taught new
facts (e.g., The name of the dog on the cracker
box is Bingo)
56Executive processes
- Source memory
- Janowsky, Shimamura, Squire (1999)
- 6-8 days later participants were asked to answer
questions about these newly learned facts and
other facts that might have been acquired outside
of the experiment if they recalled the fact they
were asked questions about when they learned the
fact (during the previous session or reading,
school etc.)
57Executive processes
- Source memory
- Janowsky, Shimamura, Squire (1999)
- Results
- Controls and frontal lobe patients did not differ
in recall of facts - Frontal lobe participants were impaired in recall
of source of facts
58Executive functions
- Sequencing
- Many activities of everyday living require people
to plan and then carry out a sequence of
activities, which must satisfy certain
requirements in order to achieve a goal - Studies have shown that patients with PFC damage
are impaired on certain sequencing activities,
but not all sequencing activities
59Executive functions
- Sequencing how is temporal order coded?
- An important component of sequencing is coding
temporal order of events - Evidence suggests that there are several
different ways in which temporal order might be
coded and that the coding of temporal order often
involves separate processes from the coding of
item information
60Executive functions
- Sequencing how is temporal order coded?
- For example, there is evidence to suggest that
memory for order information (information about
associations) depends critically upon the
hippocampus, but item information can be carried
out independently of the hippocampus - There is also evidence indicating that sequential
information can be stored and processed in a
variety of ways
61Executive functions
- Sequencing how is temporal order coded?
- There are many ways to code temporal order and
there is evidence for each of these ways
depending upon the task and other factors - 1. Associative e.g., X R C B L code as X
precedes R R precedes C C precedes L etc. - 2. order tags e.g., X R C B L code as X is
first R is second C is third, etc. - 3. familiarity e.g., a form of representation
in which strength or familiarity of item is
continuously represented, so more recent items
are stronger than earlier items, allowing
participants to make a judgement on that basis
(e.g., B is stronger then C)
62Executive functions
- Sequencing related items
- In many everyday situations, sequences of actions
are related to each other, and in many cases have
been performed several times in the past - E.g., eating out typically involves being
greeted, taken to a table, ordering a meal,
eating, getting a bill, paying, and leaving
(Schank Abelson, 1977) - It is also possible to generate a novel script
(e.g., opening a beauty salon)
63Executive functions
- Sequencing related items
- Sirigu et al. (1985) performed an experiment in
which patients with PFC damage, damage to the
posterior cortex, and normal controls were tested
on familiar and novel scripts - Participants were asked to generate familiar
(going to a restaurant) and novel (opening a
beauty salon) actions and then they were asked to
order the actions into correct sequences
64Executive functions
- Sequencing related items
- No significance difference in the number or type
of actions generated - Individuals with PFC damage made more errors than
other 2 groups when asked to order generated
actions in correct sequence and the pattern was
amplified with novel scripts - Similar findings were obtained when the different
groups were given cards with actions for scripts
written on them
65Executive functions
- Spontaneous confabulations
- Individuals, who spontaneously confabulate have
also been used to investigate role of the frontal
lobes and executive function in memory - Spontaneous confabulation statements are
actions that reflect unintentional but obvious
distortions of memory - honest lying
- Spontaneous confabulation is found sometimes but
not always after px who survive aneurysms of the
anterior communicating artery (ACoA)
66ACoA
- Ventral view of arteries in brain
- Damage to ACoA may result in memory loss,
personality change and amnesia - Damage to ACoA often results in PFC damage
67Executive functions
- Spontaneous confabulations
- Gilboa et al. (2006) investigated spontaneous
confabulations - Participants were ACoA individuals who
confabulate, ACoA individuals who do not
confabulate, and controls
68Executive functions
- Spontaneous confabulations
- Temporal context judgment experiment
- In this experiment participants were required to
make temporal context judgments about pictures of
objects (Was this object presented earlier in
this list i.e., not a previous list?) - Results
- Not all ACoA patients were impaired on the
temporal context confusion experiment, but those
with ventromedial prefrontal cortex damage were
impaired
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- Spontaneous confabulations
- Familiar narratives experiment (fairy tales and
bible stories) - In this experiment participants were asked to
recall familiar narratives - Results spontaneous confabulators did not differ
from ACoAs in terms of details recalled, but
differed in terms of the number and type of
errors (e.g., incorporation of details from other
stories, idiosyncratic details) -
70Semantic narrative performance
- Top mean details produced
- Bottom proportion errors T total errors D
distortions E external details (other
stories) I idiosyncratic errors
71Executive functions
- Spontaneous confabulations
- Further analyses
- Only px with ventromedial prefrontal and
orbitofrontal cortical damage were spontaneous
confabulators
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- Spontaneous confabulations
- Conclusion spontaneous confabulation does not
appear to be a result of confusing true memories
in time (evidence spontaneous confabulator
errors such as semantic narrative external
details) - instead it appears to be a difficulty of
strategic retrieval and difficulties of
monitoring - Strategic retrieval refers to a type of memory
retrieval in which the target memory is not
directly elicited by the retrieval cue (e.g.,
what did you do on your birthday?), but appears
to require problem solving
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- Spontaneous confabulations
- Evidence for strategic retrieval
- 1. Evidence from current study
- 2. Finding that spontaneous confabulation is
observed even for remote memories acquired prior
to brain damage (when encoding of memories was
intact) suggests stored memory is relatively
intact and problem is in retrieval
74Executive functions
- Spontaneous confabulations
- Gilboa et al. proposed
- Strategic retrieval helps frame the memory
problem and memory search - Constrains memory search
- Once a memory is retrieved strategic retrieval
monitors recovered memory for plausibility - Strategic retrieval appears to be mediated by the
ventromedial and orbito-frontal regions of the
PFC
75Executive functions
- Goal planning
- Many goals have goal/subgoal hierarchical
structure - E.g., goal Do well on exam
- Subgoals complete readings go to lectures
study before exam be well rested - Subgoals of study before exam
- Outline lectures/readings
- Make sure all notes are available
- Study with a friend
- Subgoal of outline readings
- Read 3 sections of chapter per day outline
reading as I go review outline when done -
76Executive functions
- Many goals have goal/subgoal hierarchical
structure - Notes
- 1. hierarchical structure
- 2. higher-level goals are more abstract than
lower level goals
77Executive functions
- Goal planning
- To achieve these types of goals necessary to
- Identify goal/subgoal structure
- Identify resources needed to achieve each goal
and subgoal - Identify consequences of different subgoals
78Executive functions
- Goal planning
- Identify resources needed to achieve goal (e.g.)
- Set aside time to attend lectures
- Be sure to outline lectures/readings
- Consequences of means to achieve subgoals (e.g.)
- Review with friend friend wants to party, you
have romantic interest in friend oops!!) - Study by cramming inefficient study approach
especially because final is cumulative, and I
will be tired dont do it!
79Executive functions
- Goal planning implications
- If complex goals are hierarchical then
- Achieving a complex goal can fail for several
reasons - clinical and experimental literature findings
have showed that failure occurs for several
different reasons
80Executive functions
- Effects of abstraction on performance and brain
activation Neuroimaging study - Manipulated abstraction by constructing 4
conditions that varied in abstraction - simplest task (a)
- More abstract task (b)
- Quite abstract task (c)
- Most abstract task (d)
- Badre et al., 3007, J of Cognitive Neuroscience
-
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A premotor cortex was sensitive to all 4
tasks B anterior premotor cortex was sensitive
to all but the most simple task C inferior
frontal sulcus was sensitive to the 2 most
abstract tasks D frontopolar cortex was only
sensitive to the most abstract task
82Executive functions
- Results
- More complex/abstract tasks activated more
anterior regions than less abstract tasks - More anterior regions were more sensitive, that
is, were only activated by more abstract tasks - Conclusions
- 1. more abstract tasks rely regions that process
less abstract information suggests that
participants impaired in their performance of
less abstract tasks will fail on more complex
tasks conversely participants, who perform tasks
at all but the highest level should be able to
perform less abstract tasks
83Executive functions
- Conclusions contd
- 2. Findings are consistent with the idea that PFC
function has a gradient from more specific to
more abstract processing - More specific processing in the more posterior
motor areas, more abstract in the more anterior
brain regions, and most abstract in the most
anterior, polar regions of the frontal lobe
84Executive functions
- Lesion studies of hierarchical goal-subgoal
planning - Implication of hierarchical goal-subgoal planning
is that px who fail on simpler tasks will also
fail on more complex tasks - Badre et al. (2009) investigated px with PFC
damage using the same task just described - px with more posterior damage centred on the
pre-motor cortex failed on all tasks - Px with more anterior damage were unimpaired on
less abstract tasks (a and b), but impaired more
abstract tasks (c and d)
85Executive functions
86Executive functions (social, personality and
emotional functions)
- This slide is a diagram of the skull of Phineus
Gage - As a result of this patient we now know that
executive functions are also involved in
personality, social, and emotional functions