Authors
Sara Jahfari, Lourens Waldorp, K Richard Ridderinkhof, H Steven Scholte
Publication date
2015/7/1
Journal
Journal of cognitive neuroscience
Volume
27
Issue
7
Pages
1344-1359
Publisher
MIT Press
Description
Action selection often requires the transformation of visual information into motor plans. Preventing premature responses may entail the suppression of visual input and/or of prepared muscle activity. This study examined how the quality of visual information affects frontobasal ganglia (BG) routes associated with response selection and inhibition. Human fMRI data were collected from a stop task with visually degraded or intact face stimuli. During go trials, degraded spatial frequency information reduced the speed of information accumulation and response cautiousness. Effective connectivity analysis of the fMRI data showed action selection to emerge through the classic direct and indirect BG pathways, with inputs deriving form both prefrontal and visual regions. When stimuli were degraded, visual and prefrontal regions processing the stimulus information increased connectivity strengths toward BG, whereas …
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