Speed-accuracy strategy regulations in prefrontal tumor patients

被引:16
|
作者
Campanella, Fabio [1 ]
Skrap, Miran [1 ,2 ]
Vallesi, Antonino [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Azienda Osped Univ Santa Maria della Misericordia, Neurosurg Unit, Piazzale Santa Maria della Misericordia 15, I-33100 Udine, Italy
[2] Univ Udine, Dept Human Sci, Via Petracco 8, I-33100 Udine, Italy
[3] Univ Padua, Dept Neurosci, Via Giustiniani 5, I-35128 Padua, Italy
[4] Univ Padua, Ctr Neurosci Cognit, Via Giustiniani 5, I-35128 Padua, Italy
基金
欧盟第七框架计划;
关键词
Speed-accuracy trade off; Prefrontal cortex; Cognitive flexibility; Switching; Brain tumor; TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION; FRONTAL-LOBE DAMAGE; COGNITIVE CONTROL; DECISION-MAKING; DIFFUSION-MODEL; VERBAL FLUENCY; TASK PREPARATION; TRADE-OFF; BRAIN; CORTEX;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.01.008
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The ability to flexibly switch between fast and accurate decisions is crucial in everyday life. Recent neuroimaging evidence suggested that left lateral prefrontal cortex plays a role in switching from a quick response strategy to an accurate one. However, the causal role of the left prefrontal cortex in this particular, non-verbal, strategy switch has never been demonstrated. To fill this gap, we administered a perceptual decision-making task to neuro-oncological prefrontal patients, in which the requirement to be quick or accurate changed randomly on a trial-by-trial basis. To directly assess hemispheric asymmetries in speed-accuracy regulation, patients were tested a few days before and a few days after surgical excision of a brain tumor involving either the left (N=13) or the right (N=12) lateral frontal brain region. A group of age- and education-matched healthy controls was also recruited. To gain more insight on the component processes implied in the task, performance data (accuracy and speed) were not only analyzed separately but also submitted to a diffusion model analysis. The main findings indicated that the left prefrontal patients were impaired in appropriately adopting stricter response criteria in speed to-accuracy switching trials with respect to healthy controls and right prefrontal patients, who were not impaired in this condition. This study demonstrates that the prefrontal cortex in the left hemisphere is necessary for flexible behavioral regulations, in particular when setting stricter response criteria is required in order to successfully switch from a speedy strategy to an accurate one. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 10
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Unconscious reward cues increase invested effort, but do not change speed-accuracy tradeoffs
    Bijleveld, Erik
    Custers, Ruud
    Aarts, Henk
    COGNITION, 2010, 115 (02) : 330 - 335
  • [22] Impulsivity and speed-accuracy strategies in discrimination learning
    Lozano, Jose H.
    Hernandez, Jose M.
    Santacreu, Jose
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 27 (01) : 69 - 79
  • [23] Speed-accuracy trade-off in plants
    Ceccarini, Francesco
    Guerra, Silvia
    Peressotti, Alessandro
    Peressotti, Francesca
    Bulgheroni, Maria
    Baccinelli, Walter
    Bonato, Bianca
    Castiello, Umberto
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2020, 27 (05) : 966 - 973
  • [24] SPEED-ACCURACY TRADEOFF DURING RESPONSE PREPARATION
    CAURAUGH, JH
    RESEARCH QUARTERLY FOR EXERCISE AND SPORT, 1990, 61 (04) : 331 - 337
  • [25] Speed-Accuracy Trade-Offs in Sample-Based Decisions
    Fiedler, Klaus
    McCaughey, Linda
    Prager, Johannes
    Eichberger, Juergen
    Schnell, Knut
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 2021, 150 (06) : 1203 - 1224
  • [26] Loosely Symmetric Reasoning to Cope with The Speed-Accuracy Trade-off
    Kohno, Yu
    Takahashi, Tatsuji
    6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SOFT COMPUTING AND INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, AND THE 13TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON ADVANCED INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, 2012, : 1166 - 1171
  • [27] Entropy of space-time outcome in a movement speed-accuracy task
    Hsieh, Tsung-Yu
    Pacheco, Matheus Maia
    Newell, Karl M.
    HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE, 2015, 44 : 201 - 210
  • [28] The Effects of Aging on the Speed-Accuracy Compromise: Boundary Optimality in the Diffusion Model
    Starns, Jeffrey J.
    Ratcliff, Roger
    PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 2010, 25 (02) : 377 - 390
  • [29] Computational modelling of the speed-accuracy tradeoff: No evidence for an association with depression symptomatology
    Grange, James A.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, 2022, 147 : 111 - 125
  • [30] Ethanol, errors, and the speed-accuracy trade-off
    Tiplady, B
    Drummond, GB
    Cameron, E
    Gray, E
    Hendry, J
    Sinclair, W
    Wright, P
    PHARMACOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND BEHAVIOR, 2001, 69 (3-4) : 635 - 641