Authors
Birte U Forstmann, Sara Jahfari, H Steven Scholte, Uta Wolfensteller, Wery PM van den Wildenberg, K Richard Ridderinkhof
Publication date
2008/9/24
Journal
Journal of Neuroscience
Volume
28
Issue
39
Pages
9790-9796
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
Description
The ability to suppress one's impulses and actions constitutes a fundamental mechanism of cognitive control, thought to be subserved by the right inferior frontal cortex (rIFC). The neural bases of more selective inhibitory control when selecting between two actions have thus far remained articulated with less precision. Selective inhibition can be explored in detail by extracting parameters from response time (RT) distributions as derived from performance in the Simon task. Individual differences in RT distribution parameters not only can be used to probe the efficiency and temporal dynamics of selective response inhibition, but also allow a more detailed analysis of functional neuroimaging data. Such model-based analyses, which capitalize on individual differences, have demonstrated that selective response inhibition is subserved by the rIFC. The aim of the present study was to specify the relationship between …
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