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Neuronal Correlates of Cognitive Control during Gaming Revealed by Near-Infrared Spectroscopy

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TLDR
A neuronal marker of cognitive control during gaming revealed by near-infrared spectroscopy recordings is demonstrated, with findings that fewer objects were caught during LEARN but stimulus-response mappings were successfully identified.
Abstract
In everyday life we quickly build and maintain associations between stimuli and behavioral responses. This is governed by rules of varying complexity and past studies have identified an underlying fronto-parietal network involved in cognitive control processes. However, there is only limited knowledge about the neuronal activations during more natural settings like game playing. We thus assessed whether near-infrared spectroscopy recordings can reflect different demands on cognitive control during a simple game playing task. Sixteen healthy participants had to catch falling objects by pressing computer keys. These objects either fell randomly (RANDOM task), according to a known stimulus-response mapping applied by players (APPLY task) or according to a stimulus-response mapping that had to be learned (LEARN task). We found an increased change of oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin during LEARN covering broad areas over right frontal, central and parietal cortex. Opposed to this, hemoglobin changes were less pronounced for RANDOM and APPLY. Along with the findings that fewer objects were caught during LEARN but stimulus-response mappings were successfully identified, we attribute the higher activations to an increased cognitive load when extracting an unknown mapping. This study therefore demonstrates a neuronal marker of cognitive control during gaming revealed by near-infrared spectroscopy recordings.

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Acute ingestion of rosemary water: Evidence of cognitive and cerebrovascular effects in healthy adults

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Hemodynamic Analysis for Cognitive Load Assessment and Classification in Motor Learning Tasks Using Type-2 Fuzzy Sets

TL;DR: New models of general and interval type-2 fuzzy classifiers are proposed to reduce the scope of uncertainty in cognitive load classification due to the fluctuation of the hemodynamic features within and across sessions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: NIRS can be applied to animals performing cognitive tasks in conjunction with electrophysiological methods, thus offering the possibility of investigating cortical neurovascular coupling in cognition, and appears more practical than fMRI for certain studies of cognitive neuroscience on the primate cortex.
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Using replicator dynamics for analyzing fMRI data of the human brain

TL;DR: A new method of detecting functional networks using fMRI data is presented that these networks have the property that every network member is closely connected with every other member.
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Renewing the respect for similarity

TL;DR: It is argued for a renewed focus on similarity as an explanatory concept, by surveying established results and new developments in the theory and methods of similarity-preserving associative lookup and dimensionality reduction—critical components of many cognitive functions, as well as of intelligent data management in computer vision.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disentangling the brain networks supporting affective speech comprehension.

TL;DR: These findings suggest that emotional speech comprehension results from interactions between language, ToM and emotion processing networks, and that the language network, active during both tasks, would be involved in the extraction of lexical and prosodic emotional cues.
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