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A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task

The visual color-word Stroop task is widely used in clinical and research settings as a measure of cognitive control. Numerous neuroimaging studies have used color-word Stroop tasks to investigate the neural resources supporting cognitive control, but to our knowledge all have used unimodal (typical...

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Autores principales: Fitzhugh, Megan C., Whitehead, Peter S., Johnson, Lisa, Cai, Julia M., Baxter, Leslie C., Rogalsky, Corianne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6333399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30645634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210736
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author Fitzhugh, Megan C.
Whitehead, Peter S.
Johnson, Lisa
Cai, Julia M.
Baxter, Leslie C.
Rogalsky, Corianne
author_facet Fitzhugh, Megan C.
Whitehead, Peter S.
Johnson, Lisa
Cai, Julia M.
Baxter, Leslie C.
Rogalsky, Corianne
author_sort Fitzhugh, Megan C.
collection PubMed
description The visual color-word Stroop task is widely used in clinical and research settings as a measure of cognitive control. Numerous neuroimaging studies have used color-word Stroop tasks to investigate the neural resources supporting cognitive control, but to our knowledge all have used unimodal (typically visual) Stroop paradigms. Thus, it is possible that this classic measure of cognitive control is not capturing the resources involved in multisensory cognitive control. The audiovisual integration and crossmodal correspondence literatures identify regions sensitive to congruency of auditory and visual stimuli, but it is unclear how these regions relate to the unimodal cognitive control literature. In this study we aimed to identify brain regions engaged by crossmodal cognitive control during an audiovisual color-word Stroop task, and how they relate to previous unimodal Stroop and audiovisual integration findings. First, we replicated previous behavioral audiovisual Stroop findings in an fMRI-adapted audiovisual Stroop paradigm: incongruent visual information increased reaction time towards an auditory stimulus and congruent visual information decreased reaction time. Second, we investigated the brain regions supporting cognitive control during an audiovisual color-word Stroop task using fMRI. Similar to unimodal cognitive control tasks, a left superior parietal region exhibited an interference effect of visual information on the auditory stimulus. This superior parietal region was also identified using a standard audiovisual integration localizing procedure, indicating that audiovisual integration resources are sensitive to cognitive control demands. Facilitation of the auditory stimulus by congruent visual information was found in posterior superior temporal cortex, including in the posterior STS which has been found to support audiovisual integration. The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, often implicated in unimodal Stroop tasks, was not modulated by the audiovisual Stroop task. Overall the findings indicate that an audiovisual color-word Stroop task engages overlapping resources with audiovisual integration and overlapping but distinct resources compared to unimodal Stroop tasks.
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spelling pubmed-63333992019-01-31 A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task Fitzhugh, Megan C. Whitehead, Peter S. Johnson, Lisa Cai, Julia M. Baxter, Leslie C. Rogalsky, Corianne PLoS One Research Article The visual color-word Stroop task is widely used in clinical and research settings as a measure of cognitive control. Numerous neuroimaging studies have used color-word Stroop tasks to investigate the neural resources supporting cognitive control, but to our knowledge all have used unimodal (typically visual) Stroop paradigms. Thus, it is possible that this classic measure of cognitive control is not capturing the resources involved in multisensory cognitive control. The audiovisual integration and crossmodal correspondence literatures identify regions sensitive to congruency of auditory and visual stimuli, but it is unclear how these regions relate to the unimodal cognitive control literature. In this study we aimed to identify brain regions engaged by crossmodal cognitive control during an audiovisual color-word Stroop task, and how they relate to previous unimodal Stroop and audiovisual integration findings. First, we replicated previous behavioral audiovisual Stroop findings in an fMRI-adapted audiovisual Stroop paradigm: incongruent visual information increased reaction time towards an auditory stimulus and congruent visual information decreased reaction time. Second, we investigated the brain regions supporting cognitive control during an audiovisual color-word Stroop task using fMRI. Similar to unimodal cognitive control tasks, a left superior parietal region exhibited an interference effect of visual information on the auditory stimulus. This superior parietal region was also identified using a standard audiovisual integration localizing procedure, indicating that audiovisual integration resources are sensitive to cognitive control demands. Facilitation of the auditory stimulus by congruent visual information was found in posterior superior temporal cortex, including in the posterior STS which has been found to support audiovisual integration. The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, often implicated in unimodal Stroop tasks, was not modulated by the audiovisual Stroop task. Overall the findings indicate that an audiovisual color-word Stroop task engages overlapping resources with audiovisual integration and overlapping but distinct resources compared to unimodal Stroop tasks. Public Library of Science 2019-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6333399/ /pubmed/30645634 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210736 Text en © 2019 Fitzhugh et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fitzhugh, Megan C.
Whitehead, Peter S.
Johnson, Lisa
Cai, Julia M.
Baxter, Leslie C.
Rogalsky, Corianne
A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task
title A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task
title_full A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task
title_fullStr A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task
title_full_unstemmed A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task
title_short A functional MRI investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual Stroop task
title_sort functional mri investigation of crossmodal interference in an audiovisual stroop task
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6333399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30645634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210736
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