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Memory trace in prefrontal cortex: theory for the cognitive switch

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2002

SATORU OTANI
Affiliation:
Neurobiologie des Processus Adaptatifs UMR7102, Université de Paris VI, Case 8, Building B, 6th floor, 7, quai St Bernard, 75005 Paris, France (e-mail: satoru.otani@snv.jussieu.fr)
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Abstract

The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in human and non-human primates functions as the highest-order executor for the perception-action cycle. According to this view, when perceptual stimuli from the environment are novel or complex, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex serves to set consciously a goal-directed scheme which broadly determines an action repertory to meet the particular demand from the environment. In this respect, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is a short-term activation device with the properties of a ‘cognitive switch’, because it couples a particular set of perceptual stimuli to a particular set of actions. Here, I suggest that, in order for the organism to react systematically to the environment, neural traces for the switch function must be stored in the brain. Thus, the highest-order, perception-action interface function of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex per se depends on permanently stored neural traces in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and related structures. Such a memory system may be located functionally between two of the well-documented memory systems in the brain: the declarative memory system and the procedural memory system. Finally, based on available neurophysiological data, the possible mechanisms underlying the formation of cognitive switch traces are proposed.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Cambridge Philosophical Society 2002

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