Executive Control and the Frontal Lobe: Current Issues

Executive Control and the Frontal Lobe: Current Issues

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While the importance of the prefrontal cortex for "higher-order" cognitive functions is largely undisputed, no consensus has been reached regarding precise specifications of these functions. For example, although some degree of regional specialization within the frontal lobe seems inevitable, by and large, most attempts to map specific cognitive functions onto neuroanatomical and/or cytoarchitectonic subdivisions have been disappointing. Although a high degree of functional specialization probably exists within the frontal cortex, it seems increasingly likely that the structural organization of this system does not relate, in any straightforward way, to contemporary models of cognition. While the importance of the prefrontal cortex for 'higher-order'cognitive functions is largely undisputed, no consensus has been reached regarding the precise fractionation of these functions. For example, although some degree of regional specialization within the frontal lobe seems inevitable, to date, most attempts to map specific cognitive functions onto neuroanatomical and/or cytoarchitectonic sub-divisions have been disappointing. The chapters in this volume are based on the workshop on "Executive Control and the Frontal Lobe: Current Issues"at the Hanse Institute for Advanced Study in Delmenhorst, Germany and, accordingly, most of the methodological approaches and theoretical positions within the field are well represented. Accordingly, several of the authors have focussed on behavioural and/or imaging data acquired from patients with discrete frontal-lobe lesions, while others have described the results of lesion studies in the monkey which attempt to shed light on both the anatomical and functional organisation of the prefrontal cortex. Several complimentary chapters have considered functional studies of frontal-lobe functions in healthy control volunteers, either through meta-analysis or by focussing on specific aspects of working memory, motor planning and programming or associative learning. Finally several chapters cover more global methodological approaches to the study of frontal-lobe functions, highlighting its role in arbitrary visuomotor mapping and cross-temporal action control, while in one chapter the intractions between the neuromodulatory executive systems of the reticular core and the frontal lobe are described. The Delmenhorst meeting was remarkable, not only for the sheer breadth of work discussed, but also for the widely differing approaches and opinions of some of those presenting it. This volume captures much of that same flavour and will provide the reader with up-to-date information from some of the leading figures in frontal lobe research.

Executive control and the frontal lobe: current issues
Prefrontal cortical contributions to working memory: evidence from event-related fMRI studies
Object working memory and visuospatial processing: functional neuroanatomy analyzed by event-related fMRI
Segregation of working memory functions within the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
The role of the lateral frontal cortex in mnemonic processing: the contribution of functional neuroimaging
The role of the mid-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in working memory
Functional connectivity of the anterior cingulate cortex within the human frontal lobe: a brain-mapping meta-analysis
Executive frontal functions
Control of action as mediated by the human frontal lobe
One more cup of coffee for the road: object-action assemblies, response blocking and response capture after frontal lobe damage
Massive impairment in executive functions with partial preservation of other cognitive functions: the case of a young patient with severe degeneration of the prefrontal cortex
Specialisation within the prefrontal cortex: the ventral prefrontal cortex and associative learning
Role of prefrontal cortex in a network for arbitrary visuomotor mapping
Chemical neuromodulation of frontal-executive functions in humans and other animals.
ISBN 978-3-642-64128-2
Artikelnummer 9783642641282
Medientyp Buch
Auflage Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2000
Copyrightjahr 2012
Verlag Springer, Berlin
Umfang VI, 138 Seiten
Abbildungen VI, 138 p. 10 illus. in color.
Sprache Englisch