Meta-analysis of 41 Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Executive Function in Schizophrenia
University of California, Davis · The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio · +2 more institutions
Abstract
To test whether common nodes of the cognitive control network exhibit altered activity across functional neuroimaging studies of executive cognition in schizophrenia and to evaluate the direction of these effects. DATA SOURCES: PubMed database. STUDY SELECTION: Forty-one English-language, peer-reviewed articles published prior to February 2007 were included. All reports used functional neuroimaging during executive function performance by adult patients with schizophrenia and reported whole-brain analyses in standard stereotactic space. Tasks primarily included the delayed match-to-sample, N-back, AX-CPT, and Stroop tasks. DATA EXTRACTION: Activation likelihood estimation modeling reported activation maxima as the center of a 3-dimensional gaussian function in the meta-analysis, with statistical thresholding and correction for multiple comparisons. DATA SYNTHESIS: In within-group analyses, healthy controls and patients activated a similarly distributed cortical-subcortical network, prominently including the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC), ventrolateral PFC, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and thalamus. In between-group analyses, patients showed reduced activation in the left dorsolateral PFC, rostral/dorsal ACC, left thalamus (with significant co-occurrence of these areas), and inferior/posterior cortical areas. Increased activation was observed in several midline cortical areas. Activation within groups varied modestly by task.
Healthy adults and schizophrenic patients activate a qualitatively similar neural network during executive task performance, consistent with the engagement of a general-purpose cognitive control network, with critical nodes in the dorsolateral PFC and ACC. Nevertheless, patients with schizophrenia show altered activity with deficits in the dorsolateral PFC, ACC, and mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus. Increases in activity are evident in other PFC areas, which could be compensatory in nature.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 64
Authors
5- MMMichael MinzenbergCorresponding
University of California, Davis
- ARAngela R. Laird
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
- SMSarah M. Thelen
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
- CSCameron S. Carter
Institute of Behavioral Sciences
- DCDavid C. Glahn
Yale University
Topics & keywords
- Neuroimaging
- Psychology
- Neuroscience
- Prefrontal cortex
- Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming)
- Cognition
- Stroop effect
- Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex