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The Higher, More Complicated: The Neural Mechanism of Hierarchical Task Switching on Prefrontal Cortex

Chengdong Zhu, Jiahui Han

2022Brain Sciences10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cognitive control is essential to daily life. Task switching is a classical paradigm used to study cognitive control. Previous researchers have studied the representation of different abstract hierarchical rules in the prefrontal cortex and explored the process mechanisms of task switching. However, the differences between the different hierarchical levels of task switching, especially the related neural mechanisms in the prefrontal cortex, are still unclear. This review focuses on and summarizes this issue. The present study suggests that the higher the hierarchical rule shifting or task switching, the more anterior the activation is on the prefrontal cortex. In addition, a high hierarchy of rules or tasks is more abstract, which leads to a larger switching cost.

Topics & Concepts

Prefrontal cortexTask switchingTask (project management)CognitionNeuroscienceHierarchyCognitive psychologyPsychologyMechanism (biology)Working memoryRepresentation (politics)Computer scienceEngineeringMarket economyLawPhilosophySystems engineeringEpistemologyPoliticsPolitical scienceEconomicsNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesNeural dynamics and brain functionEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
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