A Parametric Manipulation of Factors Affecting Task-induced Deactivation in Functional Neuroimaging
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Abstract
Task-induced deactivation (TID) refers to a regional decrease in blood flow during an active task relative to a "resting" or "passive" baseline. We tested the hypothesis that TID results from a reallocation of processing resources by parametrically manipulating task difficulty within three factors: target discriminability, stimulus presentation rate, and short-term memory load. Subjects performed an auditory target detection task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), responding to a single target tone or, in the short-term memory load conditions, to target sequences. Seven task conditions (a common version and two additional levels for each of the three factors) were each alternated with "rest"…
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4Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Psychology
- Working memory
- Precuneus
- Neuroimaging
- Statistical parametric mapping
- Brain mapping
- Posterior cingulate
- Stimulus (psychology)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Reduced inequalities
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