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Shifting from the Perceptual Brain to the Logical Brain: The Neural Impact of Cognitive Inhibition Training
242
Citations
27
References
2000
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionNeurolinguisticsInhibitory ProcessAffective NeuroscienceCognitionBrain OrganizationAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyPerceptual BrainCognitive Inhibition TrainingCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceNeurophilosophyBrain AreasDeductive Logic TaskLogical ThinkingHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologyProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceLogical BrainCognitive Psychology
What happens in the human brain when the mind has to inhibit a perceptual process in order to activate a logical reasoning process? Here, we use functional imaging to show the networks of brain areas involved in a deductive logic task performed twice by the same subjects, first with a perceptual bias and then with a logical response following bias-inhibition training. The main finding is a striking shift in the cortical anatomy of reasoning from the posterior part of the brain (the ventral and dorsal pathways) to a left-prefrontal network including the middle-frontal gyrus, Broca's area, the anterior insula, and the pre-SMA. This result indicates that such brain shifting is an essential element for human access to logical thinking.
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