Canceling Planned Action: An fMRI Study of Countermanding Saccades
Open Access
- 22 December 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 15 (9), 1281-1289
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhi011
Abstract
We investigated the voluntary control of motor behavior by studying the process of deciding whether or not to execute a movement. We imaged the human dorsal cortex while subjects performed a countermanding task that allowed us to manipulate the probability that subjects would be able to cancel a planned saccade in response to an imperative stop signal. We modeled the behavioral data as a race between gaze-shifting mechanisms and gaze-holding mechanisms towards a finish line where a saccade is generated or canceled, and estimated that saccade cancelation took ∼160 ms. The frontal eye fields showed greater activation on stop signal trials regardless of successful cancelation, suggesting coactivation of saccade and fixation mechanisms. The supplementary eye fields, however, distinguished between successful and unsuccessful cancelation, suggesting a role in monitoring performance. These oculomotor regions play distinct roles in the decision processes mediating saccadic choice.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inhibition and the right inferior frontal cortexTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2004
- Stop-signal inhibition disrupted by damage to right inferior frontal gyrus in humansNature Neuroscience, 2003
- Intentional Maps in Posterior Parietal CortexAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 2002
- The problem of functional localization in the human brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
- Saccadic countermanding: a comparison of central and peripheral stop signalsVision Research, 2001
- Conflict monitoring and cognitive control.Psychological Review, 2001
- Control of saccade initiation in a countermanding task using visual and auditory stop signals.Experimental Brain Research, 2000
- Cognitive and emotional influences in anterior cingulate cortexTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2000
- The neural control of lookingCurrent Biology, 2000
- Prefrontal connections of medial motor areas in the rhesus monkeyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1993