Executive control fluctuations underlie behavioral variability in anthropoids.

Mansouri FA., Kievit RA., Buckley MJ.

In complex tasks requiring cognitive control, humans show trial-by-trial alterations in response time (RT), which are evident even when sensory-motor or other contextual aspects of the task remain stable. Exaggerated intra-individual RT variability is associated with brain injuries and frequently seen in aging and neuropsychological disorders. In this opinion, we discuss recent electrophysiology and imaging studies in humans and neurobiological studies in monkeys that indicate RT variability is linked with executive control fluctuation and that prefrontal cortical regions play essential, but dissociable, roles in such fluctuation of control and the resulting behavioral variability. We conclude by discussing emerging models proposing that both extremes of behavioral variability (significantly higher or lower) might reflect aberrant alterations in various aspects of decision-making processes.

DOI

10.1016/j.tics.2024.10.012

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2025-04-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

29

Pages

331 - 343

Total pages

12

Keywords

executive control, intra-individual behavioral variability, prefrontal cortex, Executive Function, Humans, Animals, Reaction Time, Prefrontal Cortex, Decision Making, Brain

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