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Patterns of brain and cardiovascular activation while solving rule-discovery and rule-application numeric tasks

Autor
Pstrągowska, Aleksandra
WYPYCH, MAREK
Majewska, Adrianna
Kępkowicz, Anna
Draps, Małgorzata
Oleksy, Tomasz
Rynkiewicz, Andrzej
Sosnowski, Tytus
Marchewka, Artur
Data publikacji
2017
Abstrakt (EN)

It is known that solving mental tasks leads to tonic increase in cardiovascular activity. Our previous research showed that tasks involving rule application (RA) caused greater tonic increase in cardiovascular activity than tasks requiring rule discovery (RD). However, it is not clear what brain mechanisms are responsible for this difference. The aim of two experimental studies was to compare the patterns of brain and cardiovascular activity while both RD and the RA numeric tasks were being solved. The fMRI study revealed greater brain activation while solving RD tasks than while solving RA tasks. In particular, RD tasks evoked greater activation of the left inferior frontal gyrus and selected areas in the parietal, and temporal cortices, including the precuneus, supramarginal gyrus, angular gyrus, inferior parietal lobule, and the superior temporal gyrus, and the cingulate cortex. In addition, RA tasks caused larger increases in HR than RD tasks. The second study, carried out in a cardiovascular laboratory, showed greater increases in heart rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and mean arterial pressure (MAP) while solving RA tasks than while solving RD tasks. The results support the hypothesis that RD and RA tasks involve different modes of information processing, but the neuronal mechanism responsible for the observed greater cardiovascular response to RA tasks than to RD tasks is not completely clear.

Dyscyplina PBN
psychologia
Czasopismo
International Journal of Psychophysiology
Tom
117
Zeszyt
1
Strony od-do
65-74
ISSN
0167-8760
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