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Conditional and syllogistic deductive tasks dissociate functionally during premise integration

Authors :
Reverberi, F
Cherubini, P
Frackowiak, R
Caltagirone, C
Paulesu, E
Macaluso, E
REVERBERI, FRANCO
CHERUBINI, PAOLO
PAULESU, ERALDO
Frackowiak, RSJ
Macaluso, E.
Reverberi, F
Cherubini, P
Frackowiak, R
Caltagirone, C
Paulesu, E
Macaluso, E
REVERBERI, FRANCO
CHERUBINI, PAOLO
PAULESU, ERALDO
Frackowiak, RSJ
Macaluso, E.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Deduction allows us to draw consequences from previous knowledge. Deductive reasoning can be applied to several types of problem, for example, conditional, syllogistic, and relational. It has been assumed that the same cognitive operations underlie solutions to them all; however, this hypothesis remains to be tested empirically. We used event-related fMRI, in the same group of subjects, to compare reasoning-related activity associated with conditional and syllogistic deductive problems. Furthermore, we assessed reasoning-related activity for the two main stages of deduction, namely encoding of premises and their integration. Encoding syllogistic premises for reasoning was associated with activation of BA 44/45 more than encoding them for literal recall. During integration, left fronto-lateral cortex (BA 44/45, 6) and basal ganglia activated with both conditional and syllogistic reasoning. Besides that, integration of syllogistic problems additionally was associated with activation of left parietal (BA 7) and left ventro-lateral frontal cortex (BA 47). This difference suggests a dissociation between conditional and syllogistic reasoning at the integration stage. Our finding indicates that the integration of conditional and syllogistic reasoning is carried out by means of different, but partly overlapping, sets of anatomical regions and by inference, cognitive processes. The involvement of BA 44/45 during both encoding (syllogisms) and premise integration (syllogisms and conditionals) suggests a central role in deductive reasoning for syntactic manipulations and formal/linguistic representations. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308894389
Document Type :
Electronic Resource