Should I stay or should I go? The cerebral bases of street‐crossing decision

Author:

Baurès Robin1ORCID,Leblond Solène1,Dewailly Andrea1,Cherubini Marta1,Subramanian Lakshmi Devi2,Kearney Joseph K.2,Durand Jean Baptiste1,Roux Franck Emmanuel13

Affiliation:

1. CerCo, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, UPS, CHU Purpan Toulouse France

2. University of Iowa Iowa City Iowa USA

3. Pôle Neurosciences (Neurochirurgie) Centres Hospitalo‐Universitaires Toulouse France

Abstract

AbstractAn observer willing to cross a street must first estimate if the approaching cars offer enough time to safely complete the task. The brain areas supporting this perception, known as Time‐To‐Contact (TTC) perception, have been mainly studied through noninvasive correlational approaches. We carried out an experiment in which patients were tested during an awake brain surgery electrostimulation mapping to examine the causal implication of various brain areas in the street‐crossing decision process. Forty patients were tested in a gap acceptance task before their surgery to establish a baseline performance. The task was individually adapted upon this baseline level and carried out during their surgery. We acquired and normalized to MNI space the coordinates of the functional areas that influenced task performance. A total of 103 stimulation sites were tested, allowing to establish a large map of the areas involved in the street‐crossing decision. Multiple sites were found to impact the gap acceptance decision. A direct implication was however found mostly for sites within the right parietal lobe, while indirect implication was found for sites within the language, motor, or attentional networks. The right parietal lobe can be considered as causally influencing the gap acceptance decision. Other positive sites were all accompanied with dysfunction in other cognitive functions, and therefore should probably not be considered as the site of TTC estimation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

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