Individual differences in parietal and frontal cortex structure predict dissociable capacities for perception and cognitive control

Publication date: 15 November 2019Source: NeuroImage, Volume 202Author(s): Joshua O. Eayrs, Nilli LavieAbstractCapacity limits in perception can lead to failures of awareness in situations that overload capacity, resulting in various phenomena of ‘inattentional blindness’. In contrast, capacity limits in cognitive control over attention by working memory lead to increased processing of irrelevant distractors (reduced inattentional blindness). Here, using Voxel-Based Morphometry combined with Principal Components Analysis, we establish distinct brain-structural correlates of perceptual capacity, dissociable from those of cognitive control. Perceptual capacity was measured as the principal component accounting for variance across tasks of multiple object tracking, change blindness and rapid visual enumeration (i.e. ‘subitizing’). Cognitive control capacity was measured as the principal component underlying performance of three different complex working memory span tasks (involving spatial, semantic and numerical domains). Volumetric differences in the right Inferior Parietal Lobule (IPL) were predictive of individual differences in perceptual capacity, while volumetric differences in left Middle Frontal Gyrus (MFG) (as well as lateral frontal and posterior cingulate cortex in a non-parametric analysis) were predictive of individual differences in cognitive control capacity. IPL remained a significant predictor of perceptual capacity when controlling for variance account...
Source: NeuroImage - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research