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Anatomically ordered tapping interferes more with one-digit addition than two-digit addition: a dual-task fMRI study

机译:解剖学上有序的敲击对一位数字加法的影响大于两位数字加法:双任务功能磁共振成像研究

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摘要

Fingers are used as canonical representations for numbers across cultures. In previous imaging studies, it was shown that arithmetic processing activates neural resources that are known to participate in finger movements. Additionally, in one dual-task study, it was shown that anatomically ordered finger tapping disrupts addition and subtraction more than multiplication, possibly due to a long-lasting effect of early finger counting experiences on the neural correlates and organization of addition and subtraction processes. How arithmetic task difficulty and tapping complexity affect the concurrent performance is still unclear. If early finger counting experiences have bearing on the neural correlates of arithmetic in adults, then one would expect anatomically and non-anatomically ordered tapping to have different interference effects, given that finger counting is usually anatomically ordered. To unravel these issues, we studied how (1) arithmetic task difficulty and (2) the complexity of the finger tapping sequence (anatomical vs. non-anatomical ordering) affect concurrent performance and use of key neural circuits using a mixed block/event-related dual-task fMRI design with adult participants. The results suggest that complexity of the tapping sequence modulates interference on addition, and that one-digit addition (fact retrieval), compared to two-digit addition (calculation), is more affected from anatomically ordered tapping. The region-of-interest analysis showed higher left angular gyrus BOLD response for one-digit compared to two-digit addition, and in no-tapping conditions than dual tapping conditions. The results support a specific association between addition fact retrieval and anatomically ordered finger movements in adults, possibly due to finger counting strategies that deploy anatomically ordered finger movements early in the development.
机译:手指用作跨文化数字的规范表示。在先前的影像学研究中,已证明算术处理会激活已知参与手指运动的神经资源。此外,在一项双重任务研究中,显示出解剖学上有序的敲击比乘法破坏加法和减法更多,这可能是由于早期手指计数经验对加法和减法过程的神经相关性和组织的长期影响。算术任务难度和攻丝复杂度如何影响并发性能仍不清楚。如果早期手指计数的经验与成人算术的神经相关,那么人们会期望在解剖和非解剖上有序的敲击具有不同的干扰效果,因为通常手指计数在解剖上是有序的。为了解决这些问题,我们研究了(1)算术任务难度和(2)手指轻击序列的复杂性(解剖与非解剖排序)如何影响并发性能以及使用混合块/事件混合的关键神经回路的使用。与成人参与者相关的双任务功能磁共振成像设计。结果表明,攻丝序列的复杂性调节加法时的干扰,与两位加法(计算)相比,一位加法(事实检索)受解剖学上有序的攻丝的影响更大。感兴趣区域分析显示,与两位数加法相比,两位数相加的情况下,一位数的左角回回BOLD响应更高,并且在无攻丝条件下比双攻丝条件更高。结果支持成人中事实提取与解剖学上有序的手指运动之间的特定关联,这可能是由于手指计数策略在开发初期就部署了解剖学上有序的手指运动所致。

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