Stroop Performance in Normal Control Subjects: An fMRI Study S.A. Gruber, J. Rogowska, P. Holcomb, S. Soraci, and D. Yurgelun-Todd.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
When zero is not zero: The problem of ambiguous baseline conditions in fMRI Stark & Squire (2001) By Mike Toulis November 12, 2002.
Advertisements

NON-EXPONENTIAL T 2 * DECAY IN WHITE MATTER P. van Gelderen 1, J. A. de Zwart 1, J. Lee 1,3, P. Sati 1, D. S. Reich 1, and J. H. Duyn 1. 1 Advanced MRI.
Detecting Conflict-Related Changes in the ACC Judy Savitskaya 1, Jack Grinband 1,3, Tor Wager 2, Vincent P. Ferrera 3, Joy Hirsch 1,3 1.Program for Imaging.
Section 1 fMRI for Newbies
FMRI Design & Efficiency Patricia Lockwood & Rumana Chowdhury MFD – Wednesday 12 th 2011.
Qué PASA? The Posterior-Anterior Shift in Aging Simon W. Davis, Nancy A. Dennis, Sander M. Daselaar, Mathias S. Fleck, & Roberto Cabeza Cerebral Cortex,
Participants Negative BOLD and Aging: An fMRI Investigation K.M. McGregor 1,2, K.D. White 1,2,3, M. Benjamin 1,3, W.K. Berg 2, I. Fischler 2, J. Craggs.
Designing a behavioral experiment
HST 583 fMRI DATA ANALYSIS AND ACQUISITION Neural Signal Processing for Functional Neuroimaging Emery N. Brown Neuroscience Statistics Research Laboratory.
Rapid Self-Paced Event- Related Functional MRI: Feasibility and Implications of Stimulus- versus Response- Locked Timing Maccotta, Zacks & Buckner, 2001.
Efficiency in Experimental Design Catherine Jones MfD2004.
fMRI data analysis at CCBI
Opportunity to Participate
RESULTS RESULTSRESULTS RESULTSRESULTS Cognitive Control and Comorbid Methamphetamine Abuse in Schizophrenia Patients R Salo 1, S Ursu 1, TE Nordahl 1,
Attention Limited amount of mental resources Mental “resources” = general term could refer mental processes, mental representations, or mental structures.
Abstract Cognitive control processes reduce the effects of irrelevant or misleading information on performance. We report a study suggesting that effective.
Principles of MRI Some terms: – Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) quantum property of protons energy absorbed when precession frequency.
Measuring Blood Oxygenation in the Brain. Functional Imaging Functional Imaging must provide a spatial depiction of some process that is at least indirectly.
Signal and Noise in fMRI fMRI Graduate Course October 15, 2003.
Study Design and Efficiency Tom Jenkins Catherine Mulvenna.
Experimental Design Tali Sharot & Christian Kaul With slides taken from presentations by: Tor Wager Christian Ruff.
Methods in Cognitive Neuroscience I. The Emergence of Cognitive Neuroscience Fueled by the development of powerful new imaging instruments and techniques.
Neural Activation and Attention Bias to Emotional Faces in Autism Spectrum Disorders S.J. Weng, H. Louro, S.J. Peltier, J. Zaccagnini, L.I. Dayton, P.
Susceptibility Induced Loss of Signal: Comparing PET and fMRI on a Semantic Task Devlin et al. (in press)
Introduction How do people recognize objects presented in pictorial form? The ERP technique has been shown to be extremely useful in studies where the.
RESULTS The masking paradigm worked well (participants reported that they knew there was something in the prime position, but where unable to identify.
 Participants Right-handed, community-dwelling individuals; 16 younger adults (19-28 years; 8 female); 16 older adults (60-82 years; 8 female). Participants.
The basic story – fMRI in 25 words or less!. fMRI Setup.
Issues in Experimental Design fMRI Graduate Course October 30, 2002.
FMRI Methods Lecture7 – Review: analyses & statistics.
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; What is it and what can it do? Heather Rupp Common Themes in Reproductive Diversity Kinsey Institute Indiana University.
Attention Loads program into working memory (more about that later) Vast amount of perceptual information available at one Moment How much can be retained.
Daily fMRI Practice John Li MD 9/27/2012. When you preparing a fMRI study, you need to Read and understand the fMRI requirements. Design and choose proper.
Functional Connectivity in an fMRI Working Memory Task in High-functioning Autism (Koshino et al., 2005) Computational Modeling of Intelligence (Fri)
Studying Memory Encoding with fMRI Event-related vs. Blocked Designs Aneta Kielar.
Task Design EX: Participants were required to fixate on a plus sign in the middle of a screen. Sentences missing the last word were presented auditorily.
Dissociating Semantic and Phonological Processing in the Left Inferior Frontal Gyrus PM Gough, AC Nobre, JT Devlin* Dept. of Experimental Psychology, Uni.
Role of Working Memory in Visual Selective Attention de Fockert, Rees, Frith, Lavie (2001)
Drummon, S. P. A., Brown, G. G., Gillin, J. C., Stricker, J. L., Wong, E. C., Buxton, R. B. Lecturer: Katie Yan.
The effects of working memory load on negative priming in an N-back task Ewald Neumann Brain-Inspired Cognitive Systems (BICS) July, 2010.
A fMRI approach to probe CNS interaction Wei Chen, MD, MS. Modality : Animal MRI Mentor : Professor Seong-Gi Kim Kim’s Lab Faculty : Seong-Gi Kim, Tae.
Experimental Psychology PSY 433
fMRI Task Design Robert M. Roth, Ph.D.
Issues in Experimental Design fMRI Graduate Course October 26, 2005.
The brain at rest. Spontaneous rhythms in a dish Connected neural populations tend to synchronize and oscillate together.
INTRODUCTION ADULT AGE DIFFERENCES IN THE HEMODYNAMIC RESPONSE DURING VISUAL TARGET DETECTION MEASURED BY FUNCTIONAL MRI David J. Madden 1, Scott A. Huettel.
Experimental Design FMRI Undergraduate Course (PSY 181F)
RIGHT PARIETAL CORTEX PLAYS A CRITICAL ROLE IN CHANGE BLINDNESS by Naser Aljundi.
An fMRI Study of the Effect of Amphetamine on Brain Activity Stephen Uftring, Stephen Wachtel, David Chu, Cyrus McCandless, David Levin & Harriet de Witt.
Orienting Attention to Semantic Categories T Cristescu, JT Devlin, AC Nobre Dept. Experimental Psychology and FMRIB Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford,
Methodological issues for scanning geriatric populations Andy James fMRI Journal Club October 12, 2004.
Introduction Ruth Adam & Uta Noppeney Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen Scientific Aim Experimental.
Covert Attention Results (Spring). Covert Attention Results (Fall ’05)
D AVIDSSON ET AL L ONG - TERM MEDITATORS SELF - INDUCE HIGH - AMPLITUDE GAMMA SYNCHRONY DURING MENTAL PRACTICE Background: Practitioners understand.
Older adult scanning methodology II: How to decide between conflicting literature? Andy James fMRI Journal Club October 26, 2004.
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
Signal fluctuations in 2D and 3D fMRI at 7 Tesla
Experimental Design in Functional Neuroimaging
Michael S Beauchamp, Kathryn E Lee, Brenna D Argall, Alex Martin 
Signal and Noise in fMRI
Volume 92, Issue 5, Pages (December 2016)
Hierarchical Models and
Medial Prefrontal and Subcortical Mechanisms Underlying the Acquisition of Motor and Cognitive Action Sequences in Humans  Etienne Koechlin, Adrian Danek,
Volume 45, Issue 4, Pages (February 2005)
Michael S Beauchamp, Kathryn E Lee, Brenna D Argall, Alex Martin 
Acetylcholine Mediates Behavioral and Neural Post-Error Control
Integration of Local Features into Global Shapes
Volume 92, Issue 5, Pages (December 2016)
Christian Büchel, Jond Morris, Raymond J Dolan, Karl J Friston  Neuron 
Basics of fMRI and fMRI experiment design
Presentation transcript:

Stroop Performance in Normal Control Subjects: An fMRI Study S.A. Gruber, J. Rogowska, P. Holcomb, S. Soraci, and D. Yurgelun-Todd

Roadmap for today…. Purpose Hypotheses Method Results Conclusion Limitations

Purpose To better characterize the changes in cortical signal intensity that occur in the ACC during performance on the Stroop- Color Word task Specific regions of ACC: VOA and AAA (Vogt et al., 1992)

The ACC Tiny nerve bundle tucked between the cerebral hemispheres associated with attentional control possibly detects occurrence of processing conflicts a region involved in evaluatory processes at the level of response (e.g., detecting potential for error)

The Stroop Colour-Word Task Requires the inhibition of an overlearned response (word reading) in favour of a less automatic behaviour (colour naming) Model for the examination of conflict resolution and regulation of impulse control (Matochik et al., 1996) Red Green Blue Green Red Blue Blue Green Red Green

Differences from previous studies Using fMRI instead of PET Looking at specific regions of ACC, rather than considering ACC as one large region Ss examined individually using ROI localization technique Vocalization of responses instead of button press

Hypotheses Significant changes in signal intensity from baseline states will occur in the ACC during the interference subtest increased signal intensity in the AAA and VOA subdivisions of ACC will be correlated with task performance

Method: Participants 12 healthy adults (10) 4 males, 6 females Age: 23.5 (+\-) R, 1L

Conventional Image Acquisition 1.5T MRI Sagittal localizer images 2 MR protocols: –double-echo spin echo (SE) –3-D Fourier-transform (3-DFT) SE –108, 3-mm coronal slices of whole brain 3-DFT SPGR –124, 1.5-mm coronal slices of whole brain

Regions of Interest Left and right ACC (Brodmann’s area 24 and 25) ACC divided bilaterally into: –vocalization area (VOA)-area immediately anterior to the genu of the corpus callosum –attention to action area (AAA)- posterior to VOA; area superior to the anterior corpus callosum (Vogt et al., 1992) ROIs were selected a priori and outlined in each S’s MR image

Echoplanar Image Acquisition 1.5T quadrature head coil receiver noncontrast echoplanar imaging technique, based on a T2*-weighted gradient echo pulse sequence 16 coronal slices: 6-mm thick, 1-mm skip images collected every 3 s

Activation Phases

Results Data collected from 12 Ss but only 10 in analysis Data analyzed for each ROI Mean percent change (MPC) in signal intensity from baseline MPC calculated separately for AAA and VOA on the left and right for each task

Intensity change within each run

Comparison of Average Signal Intensities Between Tasks * p <.05

Correlations of Signal Intensity Change and Task Performance

Discussion On the I subtest, significant changes in signal intensity occur in both regions of the ACC compared to baseline This signal intensity change was only significant in the rVOA after controlling for the signal change in CN Only the signal intensity within the rVOA correlated w/ task performance The cognitive demands associated with this interference task appear to be associated with the rVOA Task performance on I was significantly inversely related to signal intensity change within the rVOA only

Conclusions ACC is activated in response to competing demands produced during the I condition of the Stroop test ACC is responsible for the organization and integration of cognitive functions that involve attentional subsystems In healthy adults, the VOA is specifically associated with processing in the I subtest Only the right VOA demonstrated a significant difference in signal intensity change between the colour naming and interference conditions Suggests that inhibition of responses is associated with the VOA region

Limitations Small sample size (only 10 Ss) The design (e.g., including interference task twice in the same run) Vocalization and motion artifact What do the changes in signal intensity really represent??

Other ways of approaching this question?? Different task Different design

The Block Design Assumption: neural structures underlying cognitive and behavioural processes combine in a simple additive manner Signal increases with repeated stimulation due to overlap of “on” and “off” conditions produces large signal change and thus, high statistical power Potential problems: –a new cognitive component can be purely inserted without affecting the expression of previous ones BUT processes may combine in a nonadditive/interactive fashion –can be confounded by sensitization, habituation, practice effects, inter- stimulus interaction, and predictability

Event-Related Design Detection of brain’s response to multiple presentations of brief stimuli (few msec to few sec) Better temporal information regarding response to individual trials and minimization of stimulus predictability Analysis can be restricted to post-hoc categorization of responses May not yield sufficient signal to noise in all paradigms Loss of statistical power ER design is preferred for estimation of Hemodynamic Response (HDR) function, block design is preferred for detection of activation (Liu et al., 2001)

Stroop Task & ER design RTs are slowed in the interference task Possible design: Congruent vs. incongruent stimuli (red red) Ss name the colour of the ink Present stimuli randomly throughout session Prior to scan, Ss practise two runs aloud 10 runs; each run 102 stimuli (7 incongruent, rest congruent) Each run 2 min 48 sec signal changes averaged within each ROI correlation of RT with neural activity Source: Peterson et al., 2002

RT

Advantages of Event-Related Designs Randomized ER design may resolve activation induced by individual cognitive events, that are lumped together during block design experiments Opportunity to randomly intermix events of different types because response to one event is not systematically influenced by prior events, nor confounded by differences in the S’s cognitive state Treating stimuli as distinct events provides a potentially more accurate model ER design might be necessary for studies that have to minimize habituation and expectation effects and for studies that are addressing these factors » Source: Henson 2000

Summary Current study was first to examine changes in signal intensity within specific subregions of ACC with respect to modified Stroop Task performance Results are consistent with previous studies reporting increased activity in ACC during interference subtest Ideas for future studies?