Default-Mode Activity during a Passive Sensory Task: Uncoupled from Deactivation but Impacting Activation
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Abstract
Deactivation refers to increased neural activity during low-demand tasks or rest compared with high-demand tasks. Several groups have reported that a particular set of brain regions, including the posterior cingulate cortex and the medial prefrontal cortex, among others, is consistently deactivated. Taken together, these typically deactivated brain regions appear to constitute a default-mode network of brain activity that predominates in the absence of a demanding external task. Examining a passive, block-design sensory task with a standard deactivation analysis (rest epochs vs. stimulus epochs), we demonstrate that the default-mode network is undetectable in one run and only partially detectable in a second…
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Topics
Keywords
- Default mode network
- Posterior cingulate
- Stimulus (psychology)
- Psychology
- Prefrontal cortex
- Neuroscience
- Cognition
- Brain activity and meditation
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