Localization of cortical areas activated by thinking
P. E. Roland and L. Friberg These experiments were undertaken to demonstrate that pure mental activity, thinking, increases the cerebral blood flow and that different types of thinking increase the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in different cortical areas. As a first approach, thinking was def...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1985-05, Vol.53 (5), p.1219-1243 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | P. E. Roland and L. Friberg
These experiments were undertaken to demonstrate that pure mental activity,
thinking, increases the cerebral blood flow and that different types of
thinking increase the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in different
cortical areas. As a first approach, thinking was defined as brain work in
the form of operations on internal information, done by an awake subject.
The rCBF was measured in 254 cortical regions in 11 subjects with the
intracarotid 133Xe injection technique. In normal man, changes in the
regional cortical metabolic rate of O2 leads to proportional changes in
rCBF. One control study was taken with the subjects at rest. Then the rCBF
was measured during three different simple algorithm tasks, each consisting
of retrieval of a specific memory followed by a simple operation on the
retrieved information. Once started, the information processing went on in
the brain without any communication with the outside world. In 50-3
thinking, the subjects started with 50 and then, in their minds only,
continuously subtracted 3 from the result. In jingle thinking the subjects
internally jumped every second word in a nine-word circular jingle. In
route-finding thinking the subjects imagined that they started at their
front door and then walked alternatively to the left or the right each time
they reached a corner. The rCBF increased only in homotypical cortical
areas during thinking. The areas in the superior prefrontal cortex
increased their rCBF equivalently during the three types of thinking. In
the remaining parts of the prefrontal cortex there were multifocal
increases of rCBF. The localizations and intensities of these rCBF
increases depended on the type of internal operation occurring. The rCBF
increased bilaterally in the angular cortex during 50-3 thinking. The rCBF
increased in the right midtemporal cortex exclusively during jingle
thinking. The intermediate and remote visual association areas, the
superior occipital, posterior inferior temporal, and posterior superior
parietal cortex, increased their rCBF exclusively during route-finding
thinking. We observed no decreases in rCBF. All rCBF increases extended
over a few square centimeters of the cortex. The activation of the superior
prefrontal cortex was attributed to the organization of thinking. The
activation of the angular cortex in 50-3 thinking was attributed to the
retrieval of the numerical memory and memory for subtractions. The
activation of the right midtempor |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1985.53.5.1219 |