the interactive brain: frontal-lobe function and dysfunction
Transcription
the interactive brain: frontal-lobe function and dysfunction
THE INTERACTIVE BRAIN: FRONTAL-LOBE FUNCTION AND DYSFUNCTION Elkhonon Goldberg, Ph.D., ABPP Oslo, 2012 Brodmann s Areas Brodmann (1909): Based on cytoarchitectonics: study of differences in cortical layers between areas Most common delineation of cortical areas The Frontal Lobe From E. Goldberg. (2005). The Wisdom Paradox: How Your Mind Can Grow Stronger as Your Brain Grows Older. New York: Gotham Books, Penguin Evolution of the Frontal Cortex From E. Goldberg. (2005). The Wisdom Paradox: How Your Mind Can Grow Stronger as Your Brain Grows Older. New York: Gotham Books, Penguin FRONTAL LOBES IN EVOLUTION - The development of the frontal lobes in evolution is associated with the emergence of consciousness and the capacity for insight into the mental world of others - Frontal lobe damage often results in the loss of insight into the mental world of others FRONTAL LOBES DURING LIFE SPAN - Frontal lobes are very late to complete their development (not before the age of 18 or even later). This is the approximate age recognized by modern societies as the age of social and legal maturity - Frontal lobe damage often results in the loss of social maturity in an adult patient - Frontal lobes are the earliest to succumb to the effects of normal aging Map of Brain Regions Affected in Aging From E. Goldberg. (2005). The Wisdom Paradox: How Your Mind Can Grow Stronger as Your Brain Grows Older. New York: Gotham Books, Penguin FRONTAL LOBES ARE CENTRAL TO COMPLEX DECISION MAKING - goal-directed behavior - planning and temporal organization of cognitive processes - mental flexibility - critical judgement - ability to project into the future and anticipate the consequences of behavior - capacity for insight into other people s mind - impulse control FRONTAL LOBES ARE VULNERABLE - - - - - - - - - Normal aging Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Depression Dementias Schizophrenia Autism ADHD Tourette s/OCD EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS -PREFRONTAL CORTEX -ANTERIOR CINGULATE CORTEX -STRIATUM (CAUDATE, PUTAMEN) RELATED FUNCTIONS ATTENTION AROUSAL EMOTIONS ATROUSAL/ACTIVATION -VENTRAL PONS -VENTRAL MESENCEPHALON -MIDLINE THALAMUS ATTENTION -VENTRAL MESENCEPHALON -MIDLINE THALAMUS -PREFRONTAL CORTEX EMOTIONS -AMYGDALA -PREFRONTAL CORTEX NEUROMODULATORS - NOREPINEPHRINE (AROUSAL) DOPAMINE (REWARD) SEROTONIN (MOOD) ACETYLCHOLYNE (LEARNING) NEUROMODULATORS NE - RIGHT HEMISPHERIC PREPONDERANCE - MEDIATES EXPLORATORY BEHAVIOR AND ORIENTING RESPONSE TO PERCEPTUAL NOVELTY DA - LEFT HEMISPHERE PREPONDERANCE - MEDIATES MOTOR STEREOTYPIES FRONTAL LOBE SYNDROMES -DORSOLATERAL ( PESUDODEPRESSED ) -ORBITOFRONTAL ( PSEUDOPSYCHOPATHIC ) -VENTROMEDIAL -FRONTOPOLAR -ANTERIOR CINGULAR LEFT-RIGHT ?????????????????????? INABILITY TO TERMINATE ACTION ONCE STARTED IN FRONTAL LOBE DAMAGE INABILITY TO TEMINATE BEHAVIOR FOLLOWING FRONTAL DAMAGE From E. Goldberg. (1986). Varieties of perseveration: Comparison of two taxonomies. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 8, 710-726. Types of Executive Operations 1) Guidance by internal representations (e.g., plans) -behavior is driven by a cognitive context 2) Responding to unanticipated environmental contingencies - behavior is driven by stimulus; not necessarily context In healthy individuals they work in balance Deficits found following prefrontal damage Perseveration -inability to completely switch from an earlier behavior to a new one -previously formed cognitive content Persists in disregard of changing contingencies Field-dependent -distractibility toward incidental external stimuli, causing an inability to maintain an internally driven cognitive context - response selection is determined by external stimuli, which trigger the elements of the knowledge base, which are stimulus appropriate but contextinappropriate Varieties of Perseverations From Goldberg & Tucker (1978). Motor perseverations and the levels of encoding a visual form. Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology, 4, 273-288 Varieties of Perseverations From Goldberg & Tucker (1978). Motor perseverations and the levels of encoding a visual form. Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology, 4, 273-288 Story Recall After Prefrontal Lesion The story A Hen and Golden Eggs reads as follows: A man owned a hen that was laying golden eggs. The man was greedy and wanted to get more gold at once. He killed the hen and cut it open hoping to find lot of gold inside, but there was none. After an oral presentation of the story, the patient s recall was as follows: A man was living with a hen….or rather the man was the hen s owner. She was producing gold….The man….the owner….wanted more gold at once….so he cut the hen into pieces but there was no gold….No gold at all….he cuts the hen more,…no gold…the hen remains empty….So he searches again and again….No gold….he searches all around…in all places. The search is going on with a tape recorder…they are looking here and there, nothing new around. They leave the tape recorder turned on, something is twisting there…what the hell are they recording there…some digits 0, 2, 3, 0 Story Recall After Prefrontal Lesion (Cont.) …so, they are recording all these digits…not very many of them… that s why all the other digits were recorded…turned out to be not very many of the either…so, everything was recorded…and I ll tell you what…there were only 5-6 digits there… (Experimenter: Have you finished?) Not yet, I ll finish soon…so, there were only 5-6 digits there….When they they took the bus #5 and went along Lefortoff Drive…so, you get there and transfer to bus #5 (Experimenter: You better finish!) Not yet! Wait a moment! So you take bus #5 and get to the Bauman Square…From the Bauman Square you go further on…further on. Here you take off. And again you take bus #5….I ll make it precise…so you take off…and take bus #5…and you get to cafeteria…number 5 point 6….(monologue continues). Goldberg, E. & Costa, L. (1986) In: Grant and K.Adams(Eds.) Neuropsychological Assessment of Neuropsychiatric Disorders NY Oxford U. Press ASSESSING EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS MEASURABLE CONSTRUCTS -GENERATIVITY (fluency tests, e.g. DKEFS) - MENTAL FLEXIBILITY (WCST) -OVERCOMING PREPOTENT TENDENCY (Stroop, DKEFS) -PLANNING (Tower, 20 questions) -WORKING MEMORY - ????????????? WORKING MEMORY -ANIMAL STUDIES - HUMAN STUDIES -SELECTIVITY OF MEMORY EMERGING CONSTRUCTS - COOL vs. HOT EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS - COOL (WCST) - HOT (IGT) MISSING CONSTRUCTS -ACTOR-CENTERED DECISION MAKING - COGNITIVE NOVELTY Functions of particular interest Prefrontal cortex is critical for decision making in ambiguous or novel environments FRONTAL LOBES IN NOVELTY AND UNCERTAINTY - Frontal lobes are particularly important in dealing with novel, unexpected situations characterized by uncertainty - Damage to the frontal lobes impairs the ability to deal with unanticipated, novel situations MISSING CONSTRUCTS -ACTOR-CENTERED DECISION MAKING VERIDICAL (DESCRIPTIVE) vs. ACTOR-CENTERED (PRESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING ! ! ! DESCRIPTIVE DECISION-MAKING: WHAT IS TRUE AND WHAT IS FALSE? PRESCRIPTIVE DECISION MAKING: WHAT IS MY PREFERENCE, WHAT SHOULD I DO? THEIR NEUROANATOMICAL TERRITORIES ARE DIFFERENT NEW PARADIGM TO STUDY FRONTAL-LOBE FUNCTION AND DYSFUNCTION: ACTOR-CENTERED DECISION MAKING Descriptive and Prescriptive Knowledge Territories From E. Goldberg. (2005). The Wisdom Paradox: How Your Mind Can Grow Stronger as Your Brain Grows Older. New York: Gotham Books, Penguin ACTOR-CENTERED (PRESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING IS CRITICAL FOR SURVIVAL AND SUCCESS BUT TRADITIONAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE FOCUSED ON VERIDICAL (DESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING AND MOSTLY IGNORED ACTORCENTERED DECISION MAKING VERIDICAL (DESCRIPTIVE) vs ACTORCENTERED (PRESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING Veridical decision is about finding the correct response. The solution is inherent in the situation, unambiguous and does not depend on who is solving the problem. The true/false distinction applies and there is usually only one correct response: 5+5 = ? The capital of Denmark is ? VERIDICAL (PRESCRIPTIVE) vs ACTORCENTERED (DESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING Actor-centered decision making is about personal preference. It is often different for different people in the same situation; it is not inherent in the situation; and the true/false distinction does not apply: What should I order from a restaurant menu? Should I go to graduate school, medical school, law school, or just marry and be happy after college? ACTOR-CENTERED (PRESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING IS CRITICAL FOR SURVIVAL AND SUCCESS BUT TRADITIONAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY AND COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE FOCUSED ON VERIDICAL (DESCRIPTIVE) DECISION MAKING AND IGNORED ACTOR-CENTERED DECISION MAKING CBT CARD Appearance of free choice, but in reality constrained and counterbalanced in ways that enable us to track the subjects response selection strategies and to disambiguate tasks Various versions: stochastic, Markovian, etc Allow transparent subtraction tasks CBT on SPECT H. Shimoyama, M. Aihara, H. Fukuyama, K. Hashikawa, K. Ayoagu, E. Goldberg, S. Nakazawa. Brain & Development, 26 (2004), 37-42 Cognitive Bias Task in fMRI (K. Vogeley et al., 2003) prf > all n = 11; random effects model (SPM99); height threshold p = 0.0005; extent threshold = 30 voxel Cognitive Bias Task in fMRI (K. Vogeley et al., 2003) dif > all n = 11; random effects model (SPM99); height threshold p = 0.0005; extent threshold = 30 voxel Cognitive Bias Task in fMRI (K. Vogeley et al., 2003) sim > all n = 11; random effects model (SPM99); height threshold p = 0.0005; extent threshold = 30 voxel RIGHT TO LEFT SHIFT DURING TASK FAMILIARIZATION Target Card Choice Cards (EEG spectral power in the gamma frequency band (30-40 Hz) (Kamiya et al, 2004)) 2sec µV2 2.00 1.00 0.00 EEG Spectral Power during the First Target Card Half (Kamiya et al, 2004) Choice Cards 1 sec 1 sec EEG Spectral Power during the Latter Half (Kamiya et al, 2004) Choice Cards Target Card sec sec CBT converted score Performance levels on the cognitive bias task (CBT) 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Normal * * Mild AD Moderate AD * p < .05 (re Normal Group) A. Kluger, E. Goldberg, T. Griesing, L. Malta, M. Shapiro, and S. Ferris. Early diagnosis of frontal-lobe dementias. (1997). Eighth Congress of International Psychogeriatric Association. Jerusalem, Israel. Performance levels on the perceptual matching task Similarity score 270 250 230 210 * 190 170 Normal Mild AD Moderate AD * p < .05 (re Normal group) E. Goldberg, A. Kluger, T. Griesing, L. Malta, M. Shapiro, and S. Ferris. Early diagnosis of frontal-lobe dementias. (1997). Eighth Congress of International Psychogeriatric Association. Jerusalem, Israel. Actor-centered decision making in substance abusers Verdejo-Garcia, A., Vilar-Lopez, R., Perez-Garcia, M., & Goldberg, E. (2006). Altered adaptive but not veridical decision-making in substance dependent individuals Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 12, 90–99. FUNCTIONAL LATERALIZATION IN THE FRONTAL LOBES HEMISPHERIC DIFFERENCES ACROSS MAMMALIAN SPECIES ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Yakovlevian torque – frontal poles (R>L) Yakovlevian torque – occipital poles (L>R) Cortical thickness (R>L in males) Planum temporale (L>R) Frontal operculum (L>R) Spindle cells (R>L) NE (R>L) DA (L>R) CBT CARD Means and standard deviations for converted CBT scores in strictly righthanded healthy subjects 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 40.4 (21.8) 14.9 (12.4) Males Females E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 Means and standard deviations for converted CBT scores in strictly right-handed healthy and lesioned males 70 62.3 60 (4.2) 50 40 30 0 36.4 (18.6) (26.5) 19.3 20 10 35.9 13 (5.1 (4.2) ( LFRM LPRM HCM RPRM E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 RFRM Mean group scores for the explicit conditions and CBT administration in strictlt right-handed males R FR M R M R P H C M R M Different CBT Similar LP LF R M 220 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 Individual Cognitive Bias Task (CBT) score distribution in frontal lesion groups. LFRM = left frontal right-handed males (n = 5); RFRM = right frontal right-handed males (n = 8); HCM = healthy control males (n = 21). K. Podell, M. Lovell, M. Zimmerman, and E. Goldberg. (1995). The Cognitive Bias Task and lateralized frontal lobe functions in males. Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 7, 491-501. Individual Wisconsin Card Sorting Test score distribution in frontal lesion groups. Number of categories achieved (WCST-CAT). LFRM = left frontal right-handed males (n = 4); RFRM = right frontal right-handed males (n = 8). K. Podell, M. Lovell, M. Zimmerman, and E. Goldberg. (1995). The Cognitive Bias Task and lateralized frontal lobe functions in males. Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 7, 491-501. Individual Wisconsin Card Sorting Test score distribution in frontal lesion groups. Number of perseverative responses (WCST-PR). LFRM = left frontal right-handed males (n = 4); RFRM = right frontal right-handed males (n = 8). K. Podell, M. Lovell, M. Zimmerman, and E. Goldberg. (1995). The Cognitive Bias Task and lateralized frontal lobe functions in males. Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 7, 491-501 GENDER DIFFERENCES IN THE FRONTAL LOBES Means and standard deviations for converted CBT scores in strictly righthanded healthy and lesioned females 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 64.8 54.5 (2.1) (12.6) 12 14.6 (10.9) LFRF LPRF HCF E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 7.2 (4.2) RPRF RFRF Converted CBT mean score comparison betw een male and female lesion groups 54.5 36.4 14.6 7.2 Male E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 Female F F P R R H C F F LP R F R R F R LF M M P R R M C H M LP R M 0 R 12 F 19.3 13 R 35.9 R LF 64.8 62.3 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 HANDEDNESS DIFFERENCES IN THE FRONTAL LOBES Comparison of CBT scores between strictly right-handed and non right-handed healthy subjects 220 210 200 190 180 170 160 Males 150 140 130 Female s 120 110 100 90 80 S tr ic tly 2r ig ht5 ha nde d E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994. N on2r ig ht5 ha nde d 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 CBT scores in strictly right-handed (SRH) and non-right-handed (NRH) lesioned males SRH NRH LF LP HC RP E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 RF CBT scores in strictly right-handed (SRH) and non-right-handed (NRH) lesioned females 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 SRH NRH LF LP HC RP E. Goldberg, K. Podell, R. Harner, M. Lovell, S. Riggio. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1994 RF MISSING CONSTRUCTS - COGNITIVE NOVELTY a) NAIVE b) PRACTICED c) NOVEL From E. Goldberg. (2001). The Executive Brain: Frontal Lobes and the Civilized Mind. New York: Oxford University Press. FUNCTIONAL NEUROIMAGING STUDIES OF THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF LEARNING a) L NAÏVE b) PRACTICED R L R Right-to-left shift of hippocampal activation with memorization (PET): words, paralogs, object drawings and nonsense drawings (Martin et al, 1997) Hemispheres and Novelty Cognitive Bias Task (K. Vogeley et al, 2003) Similarity Dissimilarity Preference • Similarity left fronto-parietal • Dissimilarity right fronto-parietal fixed effects model height threshold p = 0.001, corr. extent threshold 30 voxels RIGHT TO LEFT SHIFT DURING TASK FAMILIARIZATION Target Card Choice Cards (EEG spectral power in the gamma frequency band (30-40 Hz) (Kamiya et al, 2004)) 2sec µV2 2.00 1.00 0.00 FUTURE STUDIES: TOWARD MORE PERSONALIZED COGNITIVE REHABILITATION IN TBI, CVA: GENDER, HANDEDNESS, LATERALITY FUTURE STUDIES OF FUNCTIONAL LATERALIZATION IN THE FRONTAL LOBES AND RELATED STRUCTURES: fMRI TMS (with Volker Homberg) Tourette s subtyping