Title: Executive Functions
1Executive Functions
- Nathan Spreng
- Cognitive Neuroscience Psy393
- August 8, 2005
2Preliminary issues
- Lecture slides email
- Last exam
- Paper download problems?
- www.library.utoronto.ca/resources
- Final Exam Tuesday August 16, 2-5pm
- Room SF 3202
- Basic frontal lobe neuroanatomy
3Who is the Central Executive?
4Lecture Outline
- PFC and overcoming the default mode
- Attributes of executive functions
- Goal Directed Behaviour
- Video
- Supervisory System
- Capgras case study
- Video (?)
5Default mode
- Default mode
- inflexible stimulus-response linkages
- promotes automatic reactions and immediate
gratification - sensitive predominantly to the internal milieu
- remains resistant to modification by context or
experience - Preference for sameness and certainty
- Which promotes stimulus bound or stereotyped
behaviour - Ego-centric, here-now perspective.
- More conspicuous in sub-mammalian species,
children, FL patients - Remains in latent form for healthy normals
6Default mode
- The principle physiological function of the PFC
is to suppress and transcend the default mode - introducing circuitry where neuronal responses
can become contingent rather than obligatory - Stimulus - Response
- one-to-one relationship
- One-to-many response options afforded by the PFC,
tolerates greater uncertainty, diversity and
choice
7Frontal Lobes
- Four core functions
- Working memory attention
- Inhibition of distraction, perseveration, and
immediate gratification - Ability to encode context and perspective
- Dynamic mapping of significance
8Executive Function Attention
- Enables on-line holding of information.
- Incorporates info into a stream of consciousness
- Maintenance of convergent information from
different modalities - Shifting attention from external events to their
internal representations - On-line manipulation of information
- important role in the voluntary scanning and
reorganization of mental content - Enables one to transcend stimulus bound thought
that is reflexive and environmentally based
towards a selective and deliberate consciousness
9Executive Function Future Perspective
- PFC mediates shifts in time so that intended
actions and their consequences can be apprehended
from the vantage point of the future. - PFC neurons in monkeys fire in anticipation of
reward (Hikosaka and Watanabe, 2000) - PFC activation in estimation of temporal
intervals in humans (Coull and Nobre, 1998) - shifting awareness to the inferred future
- Enables the prediction of consequences for
contemplated behaviours, essential for planning,
sequencing and foresight - -impaired in PFC damage
10Fuster J., 2003
11Executive Functions
- Plan actions towards a goal
- Use information flexibly
- Realize consequences
- Draw inferences
- Independent of IQ
12- Frontal lobe damage produce deficits in
- Initiation, cessation and control of action
- Abstract and conceptual thinking
- Cognitive estimation and prediction
- Cognitive flexibility and response to novelty
- Goal directed Behaviours
13Initiation, Cessation Control of Action
- Psychological Inertia (Luria, 1966)
- Spontaneity and Fluency loss
- Perseveration repetitive behaviour unresponsive
to feedback or reward - Environmental dependency syndrome (Lhermitte,
1983) - Separation of knowledge and actions
14Psychological Inertia
- Tasks assess ease and fluidity of concept
generation - Verbal Fluency words starting with s
- L-PFC sensitivity
- repetitions, halting speech
- Non-verbal Fluency figures with 4 straight lines
- R-PFC sensitivity
15Executive functions
- Shifting concepts
- Part-whole relations
- Integrating isolated ideas
- Handling simultaneous sources of information
- Use of feedback
- Translation of knowledge to action
16Shifting sorting tests -task demands-
- Find a rule that can be used to group or sort
disparate stimuli - Shift attention to see the stimuli in a new way
17Sorting tests sub-processes
- Identification and generation of concepts
- Hypothesis testing
- Maintenance of attention
- Resistance to interference
- Utilization of feedback to guide behavior
- Inhibition of perseveration
- Shifting of cognitive set
- Perceptual, motor processes
18Wisconsin Card Sorting Test(Grant Berg, 1948
Milner, 1963)
- Wisconsin Card Sorting Task (WCST)
- no explicit rules
- learn from feedback
- must shift to new contingencies (10 correct)
- Test characteristics
- Administration methods
- Nelson, 1976 "Having failed to grasp the test
requirements, bewilderment frequently turns to
distress as responses are negatively reinforced
on a basis that to the patient appears totally
arbitrary (if not perverse)." - Measures
- Categories, Perseverations, Loss of Set
19Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
Measures Categories, Perseverations, Loss of Set
20Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
- What frontal subregions are implicated?
- DLPFC Milner (1963)
- Medial frontal Drewe (1974)
- Orbitofrontal Stuss et al. (1983)
- Posterior lesion effects
21Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
WCST vs. sensorimotor control (Berman et al.,
1995)
- Is it sensitive and specific to frontal function
in healthy adults?
22Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
- Sensitive to diffuse injury and certain posterior
damage - With proper controls
- Perseveration sensitive to DLPFC and superior
medial frontal damage - Set loss sensitive to inferior medial and right
DLPFC damage - Task sensitivity modulated by examiner-provided
structure - Not a proxy for frontal function in healthy
participants
23Psychological Inertia
- Environmental dependency syndrome (Lhermitte)
- Utilization behavior
- Actions impelled by the physical or social
environment - Excessive dependency on the immediate environment
- stereotyped responses
- ignoring context.
- Interferes with behavioural flexibility and
individual autonomy (free will).
24Neuroimaging
- Go/No Go
- go trial push button
- no-go withhold response (more difficult if rare)
- fMRI
- R-DLPFC (BA46/9)
- R-VLPFC (BA44)
- Anterior Cingulate (ACC)
25Abstract v Concrete Thinking
- Modified WCST
- Conceptual sorting criteria
- 2 groups, 8 dimensions
- water/land, triangle location, etc.
- 2 groups, 8 dimensions Conceptual sorting
criteria - Deficit in sorting into meaningful piles even
with concrete clues
26Cognitive Estimation Prediction
- Cognitive estimation deficits deducing judgment
from known information - Prices
- Time to complete
- Prioritizing becomes difficult
- Intact knowledge base (Semantic memory)
- Prediction impaired for social and ToM
27Cognitive flexibility and response to novelty
- FL deficits when...
- Learned behaviour must be overridden
- Environmental information doesnt guide behaviour
28Goal Directed Behaviours
- Staying on task
- Sequencing
- Shifting Set Strategy Modification
- Using information to guide behaviour
- Self-monitoring
29Staying on task
- Prerequisite for success
- FL patients wander off...
- DLPFC maintenance of attention
- establishes task relevancy
30Sequencing
- Determining steps to achieve a goal
- Recognition v Recency
- TL v FL
- Self-ordered pointing
31Sequencing
- Tower of London (Shallice, 1982)
- Move balls one at a time
- Desired position
- Minimum moves
- FL lesions, L gt R deficit. Aimless moves
- Neuroimaging DLPFC, L gt R activity
32Shifting Set Strategy Modification
- Conceptual or perceptual shift deficits
- Changing directions midway through
- sorting task
- Switching FL region determined by task demand
- Involves inhibition of previous set
- Formation of new set
(Dias et al, 1997 Slamecka, 1968 Owen, 1991)
33Shifting Set Strategy Modification
- A Respond according to shape
- B Respond according to shape
- Shapes replaced with novel exemplars
- Intradimentional
- C Shift to other dimension (lines)
- Previously relevant dimension must be present to
evoke deficits - D Reversal of reward contingencies (within
dimension)
(Dias et al, 1997 Slamecka, 1968 Owen, 1991)
34Shifting Set Strategy Modification
- L-PFC shifts attention between perceptual
dimensions - OFC reverses stimulus-reward associations within
perceptual domains - Mechanisms of on-line processing are independent
of inhibitory control in PFC - Impairment of inhibitory control is restricted to
novel situations - PFC areas involved in
- suppression of previously established response
sets - not involved in the acquisition of these response
sets
(Dias et al, 1997 Slamecka, 1968 Owen, 1991)
35Guiding behaviour
- Environmental contingencies influence effective
goal directed behaviour - ex Telephone call while making dinner
- Sub-goals interwoven
- Neuroimaging hierarchical subgoals OFC
- 2 tasks performed in succession towards a general
goal - baseline task switch no retention
- and holding info over delay
36Self-monitoring
- Is the goal being approached?
- Diminished motivation
- Error monitoring involved? (ACC)
- error detecting
- conflict monitoring
- FL works with the ACC to monitor action and
subjective (not absolute) detection of errors
37 38Theoretical Account of Executive Functions
39Theoretical accounts
- Feedback utilization (Luria)
- Inhibition (Dias, 1996 Diamond, 1989)
- Working memory (Goldman-Rakic, 1987 Kimberg
Farah, 1993) - Scripts managerial knowledge units (MKU
Grafman, 1989) - Supervisory Attention (Norman Shallice, 1986
Stuss et al, 1995)
40Controlled vs. Automatic Processing
- Contention Scheduling
- automatic processing
- time learning
- role of FL diminishes with experience
- Supervisory Attention System
- effortful/controlled processing
- where automatic processing would fail and must be
overcome - novel events without processing schemes
- when tasks are technically difficult
- problem solving required
41Supervisory Attention System
- Modules Basic cognitive operations
- Schemata Standard and routine programs for the
control of overlearned skills in the modules - Contention Scheduling The lateral inhibitory
mechanisms that control competition between
schemata - Supervisory System General executive
- Situations where incorrect response is liable to
be produced by unmodulated contention scheduling - Situations in which no routine exists (novel).
Shallice (1982) Norman Shallice (1980)
42Supervisory Attentional System
Supervisory Attentional System (4)
Schema Control Units
Contention Scheduling (3)
Trigger Data Base
Perceptual System
(2)
Special-purpose Cognitive Subsystems (1)
(Action)
Shallice (1981)
43Four Components of the Supervisory System
1) Cognitive units or modules 2) Schemata 3)
Contention scheduling 4) Supervisory
(attentional) processes
44Four Components of the Supervisory System
- 1) Modules Basic cognitive operations
- 2) Schemata Standard and routine programs for
the control of overlearned skills in the modules - 3) Contention Scheduling The lateral inhibitory
mechanisms that control competition between
schemata - 4) Supervisory System General executive
component - top down processing
45Schema interactions
46Seven Anterior AttentionCategories of Tasks
- Sustaining
- Concentrating
- Sharing
- Suppressing
- Switching
- Preparing
- Setting
47Supervisory System
E I C M L
- Energize a Schema
- Inhibit a Schema
- Adjust Contention Scheduling
- Monitor Goal Fulfillment
- If-then Logic
48Anterior Attention System
Supervisory System
E I C M L
Schemata
Perceptual Information
Effector System
49Sustaining attention
- Definition
- Attention to relevant events occurring at a
relatively slow rate over prolonged periods of
time
50Sustaining Attention a. Energize task
schema b. Inhibit competing schema c.
Monitor responses on and off tasks
E I C M L
a
b
c
c
51Concentrating Attention
- Definition
- Attention when task is demanding and relevant
events occur too quickly rather than too slowly
52Concentrating Attention a. energize task
schema b. decrease inhibition among
similar schema to allow high
activity levels in several schema
c. monitor responses on tasks for minutes d.
If-then logic
d
E I C M L
a b c
d
53Fractionating the SAS
Process
Goal
Putative localization
Sustain
Mitigate schema decay
R Frontal
Concentrate
Activate one schema, inhibit others
Anterior cingulate
Sharing
Activate two schemas
Orbitofrontal, ACG
Inhibit selection of inappropriate
Suppress
DLPFC (L?)
schema
Switch
Activate recently inhibited schema
DLPFC, medial PFC
Submaximal activation for later
Prepare
DLPFC
response
Consistent mobilization of most
L DLPFC
Set
appropriate schema across sessions
Stuss et al. (1995)
54Capgras Syndrome
- Misidentification of people as other people, or
locations as other locations - (Stuss Alenxander, 19791999)
- Reduplicative Paramnesia Subjective certainty
that a familiar place or person has been
duplicated
55Capgras Syndrome
- CT
- Diminished density
- Bilateral frontal
- Right temporal (including amygdala)
- Enlarged ventricles
- (R gt L)
- Significant cognitive impairment, including
executive functioning and memory
- Slow recovery
- 10 months after injury first weekend visit
- wife - new hair cut, new car
- teenage kids - a year older
56Capgras Syndrome
- Reports disorientation
- New family has replaced the old
- with notable similarity
- Desertion of previous wife not distressing
- kind enough to find replacement
57Capgras Syndrome
Demonstrates implausibility but cannot change
feeling
58Capgras Syndrome
- Years later
- Maintained belief of second family
- Neuropsychological testing normal IQ, memory,
language, basic attention impaired on frontal
tests - Why?
- Executive functioning impairment
- Failure of personal evaluation or validation of
the situation