Neuroscience of Rule-Guided Behavior
by: Silvia A. Bunge, Jonathan D. Wallis
Contents
Contributors
Introduction
I. Rule representation
1. Selection between Competing Responses based on Conditional Rules
Michael Petrides
2. Single neuron activity underlying behavior-guiding rules
Jonathan D. Wallis
3. Brain mechanisms involved in retrieving and maintaining task rules
Silvia A. Bunge and Michael J. Souza
4. Maintenance and implementation of task rules
Katsuyuki Sakai
5. The neurophysiology of abstract response strategies
Aldo Genovesio and Steven P. Wise
6. Using complex systems of abstract rules: Executive control and automaticity at highest orders of abstraction
Kamyar Keramatian and Kalina Christoff
II. Rule implementation
7. Contrasting roles of lateral and medial frontal cortices in action selection
Matthew F.S. Rushworth, Paula L. Croxson, Mark J. Buckley, and Mark E. Walton
8. Differential involvement of the prefrontal, premotor, and primary motor cortices in rule-based motor behavior
Eiji Hoshi
9. The functional neuroanatomy of task rule implementation
Marcel Brass, Jan Derrfuss, and D. Yves von Cramon
10. Time course of executive processes: Data from the event-related optical signal (EROS)
Gabriele Gratton, Kathy A. Low, and Monica Fabiani
III. Task-switching
11. Task-switching in human and non-human primates: Understanding rule encoding and control from behavior to single neurons
Gijsbert Stoet and Lawrence H. Snyder
12. Neural mechanisms of cognitive control in task-switching: rules, representations, and preparation
Hannes Ruge and Todd S. Braver
13. The differential contribution of the catecholamines to rule learning and rule switching
Angela C. Roberts
14. Dopaminergic modulation of cognitive flexibility: The role of the basal ganglia
Roshan Cools
IV. Building blocks of rule representation
15. Prefrontal-medial temporal lobe interactions in memory
Paul A. Lipton and Howard B. Eichenbaum
16. Ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and controlling memory to inform action
David Badre
17. Neuronal mechanisms of visual categorization
David J. Freedman
18. Rules through recursion: How interactions between the frontal cortex and basal ganglia may build abstract rules from concrete ones
Earl K. Miller & Timothy J. Buschsman
19. A theoretical account of the development of rule use over childhood
Philip D. Zelazo
http://www.book4doc.com/25473
by: Silvia A. Bunge, Jonathan D. Wallis
Contents
Contributors
Introduction
I. Rule representation
1. Selection between Competing Responses based on Conditional Rules
Michael Petrides
2. Single neuron activity underlying behavior-guiding rules
Jonathan D. Wallis
3. Brain mechanisms involved in retrieving and maintaining task rules
Silvia A. Bunge and Michael J. Souza
4. Maintenance and implementation of task rules
Katsuyuki Sakai
5. The neurophysiology of abstract response strategies
Aldo Genovesio and Steven P. Wise
6. Using complex systems of abstract rules: Executive control and automaticity at highest orders of abstraction
Kamyar Keramatian and Kalina Christoff
II. Rule implementation
7. Contrasting roles of lateral and medial frontal cortices in action selection
Matthew F.S. Rushworth, Paula L. Croxson, Mark J. Buckley, and Mark E. Walton
8. Differential involvement of the prefrontal, premotor, and primary motor cortices in rule-based motor behavior
Eiji Hoshi
9. The functional neuroanatomy of task rule implementation
Marcel Brass, Jan Derrfuss, and D. Yves von Cramon
10. Time course of executive processes: Data from the event-related optical signal (EROS)
Gabriele Gratton, Kathy A. Low, and Monica Fabiani
III. Task-switching
11. Task-switching in human and non-human primates: Understanding rule encoding and control from behavior to single neurons
Gijsbert Stoet and Lawrence H. Snyder
12. Neural mechanisms of cognitive control in task-switching: rules, representations, and preparation
Hannes Ruge and Todd S. Braver
13. The differential contribution of the catecholamines to rule learning and rule switching
Angela C. Roberts
14. Dopaminergic modulation of cognitive flexibility: The role of the basal ganglia
Roshan Cools
IV. Building blocks of rule representation
15. Prefrontal-medial temporal lobe interactions in memory
Paul A. Lipton and Howard B. Eichenbaum
16. Ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and controlling memory to inform action
David Badre
17. Neuronal mechanisms of visual categorization
David J. Freedman
18. Rules through recursion: How interactions between the frontal cortex and basal ganglia may build abstract rules from concrete ones
Earl K. Miller & Timothy J. Buschsman
19. A theoretical account of the development of rule use over childhood
Philip D. Zelazo
http://www.book4doc.com/25473
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