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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 2002, 22(2):546-553
Cerebellar Involvement in Response Reassignment Rather Than
Attention
Amanda
Bischoff-Grethe1,
Richard B.
Ivry2, and
Scott
T.
Grafton1
1 Center for Cognitive Neuroscience and the Department
of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New
Hampshire 03755, and 2 Department of Psychology, University
of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720-1650
A number of functional hypotheses have recently been advanced to
account for how the cerebellum may contribute to cognition. Neuropsychological studies suggest the cerebellum is involved in
switching attentional set. We present evidence that fails to support
this hypothesis. Rather, we propose that in such tasks, the cerebellum
is involved with the remapping of response alternatives to different
types of stimuli. In our experiment, participants fixated on the center
of a screen onto which a random presentation of four visual stimuli was
presented. The stimuli were grouped along two dimensions (color: red
square or blue square; shape: white circle or white triangle).
Participants were instructed to respond with a button press only to
presented stimuli for a particular dimension (e.g., red squares), to
switch between two dimensions (where the target on the attended
dimension served both as a signal for a response and as an indicator to
shift attention to the other dimension), or to switch attention between
two dimensions but make an overt response only to targets on one of the
dimensions. Using functional imaging, we identify areas of lateral
cerebellar cortex that are recruited when subjects must reassign motor
responses to different stimuli. Furthermore, we demonstrate that
switching of attention between dimensions without a motor response does not produce stronger activation within the cerebellum compared with
conditions involving response and attention to a single dimension. These results suggest the cerebellum is involved in response reassignment.
Key words:
functional imaging; cerebellum; attention; sensorimotor; response reassignment; cognition
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/222546-08$05.00/0
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