Abstract
The exact role of the basal ganglia in both the motor and
non-motor domains has proven elusive since it is virtually
impossible to refer to its function in isolation of cortical,
and especially frontal cortical circuits. The result is that
we often speak of frontal-striatal circuits and functions but
this still leaves us in the dark when trying to specify basal
ganglia information processing. A critical review of the data
from both basic science and clinical studies suggests that we
should break down processing along a temporal continuum, including
the domains of context, sequential information processing, and
feedback or reinforcement (i.e., the consequences of action).
This analysis would cut across other theoretical constructs,
such as attention, central executive, memory, and learning
functions, traditionally employed in the neuropsychological
literature. Under specified behavioral constraint, the basal
ganglia can then be seen to be involved in fundamental aspects
of attentional control (often covert), in the guidance of the
early stages of learning (especially reinforcement-based, but
also encoding strategies in explicit paradigms), and in the
associative binding of reward to cue salience and response
sequences via dopaminergic mechanisms. Parkinson's disease
is considered to offer only a limited view of basal ganglia
function due to partial striatal depletion of dopamine and the
potential involvement of other structures and transmitters in
its pathology. It is hoped that the present formulation will
suggest new heuristic research strategies for basal ganglia
research, permitting a closer link to be established between
neurophysiological, functional imaging and neuropsychological
paradigms. (JINS, 2003, 9, 103–128.)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Clinical Psychology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
129 articles.
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