1. Ventromedial prefrontal damage reduces mind-wandering and biases its temporal focus
- Author
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Elena Bertossi, Elisa Ciaramelli, Bertossi, E., and Ciaramelli, Elisa
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Chronesthesia ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Aneurysm, Ruptured ,ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Brain mapping ,050105 experimental psychology ,Thinking ,default mode network ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mind-wandering ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,mental time travel ,Dominance, Cerebral ,Prefrontal cortex ,Default mode network ,Brain Mapping ,fungi ,05 social sciences ,mind-wandering ,Intracranial Aneurysm ,Cognition ,Original Articles ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Stroke ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Brain Damage, Chronic ,Female ,Nerve Net ,Construct (philosophy) ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Mind-wandering, an ubiquitous expression of humans' mental life, reflects a drift of attention away from the current task towards self-generated thoughts, and has been associated with activity in the brain default network. To date, however, little is understood about the contribution of individual nodes of this network to mind-wandering. Here, we investigated whether the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is critically involved in mind-wandering, by studying the propensity to mind-wander in patients with lesion to the vmPFC (vmPFC patients), control patients with lesions not involving the vmPFC, and healthy individuals. Participants performed three tasks varying in cognitive demands while their thoughts were periodically sampled, and a self-report scale of daydreaming in daily life. vmPFC patients exhibited reduced mind-wandering rates across tasks, and claimed less frequent daydreaming, than both healthy and brain-damaged controls. vmPFC damage reduced off-task thoughts related to the future, while it promoted those about the present. These results indicate that vmPFC critically supports mind-wandering, possibly by helping to construct future-related scenarios and thoughts that have the potential to draw attention inward, away from the ongoing tasks.
- Published
- 2016
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