Functional reconfiguration of task-active frontoparietal control network facilitates abstract reasoning

Author:

Morin Thomas M12ORCID,Moore Kylie N12ORCID,Isenburg Kylie12ORCID,Ma Weida2,Stern Chantal E123

Affiliation:

1. Boston University Graduate Program for Neuroscience, , 677 Beacon St., Boston, MA 02215, United States

2. Cognitive Neuroimaging Center, Boston University , 610 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA 02215, United States

3. 64 Cummington Mall, Boston University Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, , Boston, MA 02215, United States

Abstract

Abstract While the brain’s functional network architecture is largely conserved between resting and task states, small but significant changes in functional connectivity support complex cognition. In this study, we used a modified Raven’s Progressive Matrices Task to examine symbolic and perceptual reasoning in human participants undergoing fMRI scanning. Previously, studies have focused predominantly on discrete symbolic versions of matrix reasoning, even though the first few trials of the Raven’s Advanced Progressive Matrices task consist of continuous perceptual stimuli. Our analysis examined the activation patterns and functional reconfiguration of brain networks associated with resting state and both symbolic and perceptual reasoning. We found that frontoparietal networks, including the cognitive control and dorsal attention networks, were significantly activated during abstract reasoning. We determined that these same task-active regions exhibited flexibly-reconfigured functional connectivity when transitioning from resting state to the abstract reasoning task. Conversely, we showed that a stable network core of regions in default and somatomotor networks was maintained across both resting and task states. We propose that these regionally-specific changes in the functional connectivity of frontoparietal networks puts the brain in a “task-ready” state, facilitating efficient task-based activation.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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