The neural bases of inhibitory function are reviewed, covering data from paradigms assessing inhibition of motor responses (antisaccade, go/nogo, stop-signal), cognitive sets (e.g., Wisconsin Card Sort Test), and emotion (fear extinction). The frontal cortex supports performance on these paradigms, but the specific neural circuitry varies: response inhibition depends upon fronto-basal ganglia networks, inhibition of cognitive sets is supported by orbitofrontal cortex, and retention of fear extinction reflects ventromedial prefrontal cortex–amygdala interactions. Inhibition is thus neurobiologically heterogeneous, although right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex may support a general inhibitory process. Dysfunctions in these circuits may contr...
The neural network of our brain processes all kinds of information through excitatory and inhibitory...
Expressive suppression refers to the inhibition of emotion-expressive behavior (e.g., facial express...
Emotion regulation mediates socio-cognitive functions and is essential for interactions with others....
The ability to inhibit action tendencies is vital for adaptive human behaviour. Various paradigms ar...
To understand daily life behaviour, it is important to understand what underlying neuroanatomical br...
Inhibitory control is difficult to study in behavioral experiments because of its nature; a successf...
Inhibition is one of the core concepts in cognitive neuroscience, referring to a higher-order contro...
Inhibition is considered a key mechanism serving the control and regulation of goal-oriented behavio...
Neural mechanisms of cognitive control enable us to initiate, coordinate and update behaviour. Centr...
Individual differences in inhibition-related functions have been implicated as risk factors for a br...
Response inhibition is the capacity to suppress inappropriate actions and is considered to be a fund...
© 2015.There has been much recent debate regarding the neural basis of motor response inhibition. An...
The ability to inhibit or suppress unwanted or inappropriate actions, is an essential component of e...
Inhibition is a cognitive ability that allows humans to respond flexibly rather than re-flexively to...
People can inhibit an action because of an instruction by an external stimulus, or because of their ...
The neural network of our brain processes all kinds of information through excitatory and inhibitory...
Expressive suppression refers to the inhibition of emotion-expressive behavior (e.g., facial express...
Emotion regulation mediates socio-cognitive functions and is essential for interactions with others....
The ability to inhibit action tendencies is vital for adaptive human behaviour. Various paradigms ar...
To understand daily life behaviour, it is important to understand what underlying neuroanatomical br...
Inhibitory control is difficult to study in behavioral experiments because of its nature; a successf...
Inhibition is one of the core concepts in cognitive neuroscience, referring to a higher-order contro...
Inhibition is considered a key mechanism serving the control and regulation of goal-oriented behavio...
Neural mechanisms of cognitive control enable us to initiate, coordinate and update behaviour. Centr...
Individual differences in inhibition-related functions have been implicated as risk factors for a br...
Response inhibition is the capacity to suppress inappropriate actions and is considered to be a fund...
© 2015.There has been much recent debate regarding the neural basis of motor response inhibition. An...
The ability to inhibit or suppress unwanted or inappropriate actions, is an essential component of e...
Inhibition is a cognitive ability that allows humans to respond flexibly rather than re-flexively to...
People can inhibit an action because of an instruction by an external stimulus, or because of their ...
The neural network of our brain processes all kinds of information through excitatory and inhibitory...
Expressive suppression refers to the inhibition of emotion-expressive behavior (e.g., facial express...
Emotion regulation mediates socio-cognitive functions and is essential for interactions with others....