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Cortical bases of elementary deductive reasoning: Inference, memory, and metadeduction

Authors :
Serena D’Agostini
Miran Skrap
Tim Shallice
Luca L. Bonatti
Carlo Reverberi
Reverberi, F
Shallice, T
D'Agostini, S
Skrap, M
Bonatti, L
Source :
Neuropsychologia. 47:1107-1116
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2009.

Abstract

Elementary deduction is the ability of unreflectively drawing conclusions from explicit or implicit premises, on the basis of their logical forms. This ability is involved in many aspects of human cognition and interactions. To date, limited evidence exists on its cortical bases. We propose a model of elementary deduction in which logical inferences, memory, and meta-logical control are separable subcomponents. We explore deficits in patients with left, medial and right frontal lesions, by both studying patients' deductive abilities and providing measures of their meta-logical sensitivity for proof difficulty. We show that lesions to left lateral and medial frontal cortex impair abilities at solving elementary deductive problems, but not so lesions to right frontal cortex. Furthermore, we show that memory deficits differentially affect patients according to the locus of the lesion. Left lateral patients with working memory deficits had defective deductive abilities, but not so left lateral patients with spared working memory. In contrast, in medial patients both deductive and meta-deductive abilities were affected regardless of the presence of memory deficits. Overall, the results are compatible with a componential view of elementary deduction, and call for the elaboration of more fine-grained models of deductive abilities.

Details

ISSN :
00283932
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuropsychologia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea1a879a2cdfdc69705c3ef9f56de1cc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2009.01.004