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      Default-mode activity during a passive sensory task: uncoupled from deactivation but impacting activation.

      1 ,
      Journal of cognitive neuroscience
      MIT Press - Journals

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          Abstract

          Deactivation refers to increased neural activity during low-demand tasks or rest compared with high-demand tasks. Several groups have reported that a particular set of brain regions, including the posterior cingulate cortex and the medial prefrontal cortex, among others, is consistently deactivated. Taken together, these typically deactivated brain regions appear to constitute a default-mode network of brain activity that predominates in the absence of a demanding external task. Examining a passive, block-design sensory task with a standard deactivation analysis (rest epochs vs. stimulus epochs), we demonstrate that the default-mode network is undetectable in one run and only partially detectable in a second run. Using independent component analysis, however, we were able to detect the full default-mode network in both runs and to demonstrate that, in the majority of subjects, it persisted across both rest and stimulus epochs, uncoupled from the task waveform, and so mostly undetectable as deactivation. We also replicate an earlier finding that the default-mode network includes the hippocampus suggesting that episodic memory is incorporated in default-mode cognitive processing. Furthermore, we show that the more a subject's default-mode activity was correlated with the rest epochs (and "deactivated" during stimulus epochs), the greater that subject's activation to the visual and auditory stimuli. We conclude that activity in the default-mode network may persist through both experimental and rest epochs if the experiment is not sufficiently challenging. Time-series analysis of default-mode activity provides a measure of the degree to which a task engages a subject and whether it is sufficient to interrupt the processes--presumably cognitive, internally generated, and involving episodic memory--mediated by the default-mode network.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Cogn Neurosci
          Journal of cognitive neuroscience
          MIT Press - Journals
          0898-929X
          0898-929X
          Nov 2004
          : 16
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Neurology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA 94301-5719, USA. greicius@stanford.edu
          Article
          10.1162/0898929042568532
          15601513
          71800d42-02bf-4a25-b454-8429118f0f35
          History

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