The prefrontal landscape: implications of functional architecture for understanding human mentation and the central executive
- 29 October 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 351 (1346), 1445-1453
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1996.0129
Abstract
The functional architecture of prefrontal cortex is central to our understanding of human mentation and cognitive prowess. This region of the brain is often treated as an undifferentiated structure, on the one hand, or as a mosaic of psychological faculties, on the other. This paper focuses on the working memory processor as a specialization of prefrontal cortex and argues that the different areas within prefrontal cortex represent iterations of this function for different information domains, including spatial cognition, object cognition and additionally, in humans, semantic processing. According to this parallel processing architecture, the ‘central executive’ could be considered an emergent property of multiple domain-specific processors operating interactively. These processors are specializations of different prefrontal cortical areas, each interconnected both with the domain-relevant long-term storage sites in posterior regions of the cortex and with appropriate output pathways.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Response suppression, initiation and strategy use following frontal lobe lesionsNeuropsychologia, 1996
- Dissociation in prefrontal cortex of affective and attentional shiftsNature, 1996
- Object and Spatial Visual Working Memory Activate Separate Neural Systems in Human CortexCerebral Cortex, 1996
- Impact of frontal lobe lesions on rehabilitation and recovery from acute brain injuryNeuroRehabilitation, 1995
- Afferent connections of the caudolateral orbitofrontal cortex taste area of the primateNeuroscience, 1995
- Prefrontal neuronal activity in rhesus monkeys performing a delayed anti-saccade taskNature, 1993
- Posterior parietal cortex in rhesus monkey: II. Evidence for segregated corticocortical networks linking sensory and limbic areas with the frontal lobeJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1989
- Bilateral frontal lobe disease and selective delayed response deficits in humans.Behavioral Neuroscience, 1986
- Severe disturbance of higher cognition after bilateral frontal lobe ablationNeurology, 1985
- Working MemoryPsychology of Learning and Motivation, 1974