In the realm of cognitive science, the quest to understand cognitive control has persisted for decades. Traditional notions of cognitive control have focused on inhibition through the prefrontal... Show moreIn the realm of cognitive science, the quest to understand cognitive control has persisted for decades. Traditional notions of cognitive control have focused on inhibition through the prefrontal cortex, but this dissertation challenges that perspective with a more comprehensive framework: The Metacontrol State Model (MSM). The MSM proposes that cognitive control emerges from the interplay between two opposing systems – one promoting flexibility and the other promoting persistence. These systems interact to shape our cognitive processing styles, thereby influencing our ability to effectively regulate our actions. This dissertation explores questions such as why individuals exhibit differences in cognitive control capacity and how state-related changes and trait-related predispositions impact cognitive control function. The overarching goal of this dissertation is to empirically test the MSM model and shed light on the factors that influence cognitive control. Through a series of experiments, it seeks to understand how altered states of consciousness, achieved through meditation techniques or serotonergic psychedelics, affect the balance between intentional and habitual processes. Additionally, it examines the extent to which individual trait biases serve as trans-diagnostic markers in various psychopathologies. This work comprises a literature review and six empirical articles. By integrating theory and empirical research, this dissertation takes us on a journey into the intricate world of cognitive control, shaping our understanding of how it influences our lives. Show less
It is common in life to not perform at the very top of our cognitive abilities. This phenomenon usually exacerbates when we are under high levels of stress and in people with psychiatric disorders.... Show moreIt is common in life to not perform at the very top of our cognitive abilities. This phenomenon usually exacerbates when we are under high levels of stress and in people with psychiatric disorders. Attention to negative information is considered to play a crucial role in the development and maintenance of these disorders, especially anxiety-related disorders. Attention to negative information is not necessarily bad as it is an evolutionary function to protect us from dangerous situations. However, it can be destructive when it occurs constantly or when we need to focus on an important task. There are many situations where we have to perform difficult cognitive tasks and we worry about our performance or other people’s evaluation. Trait cognitive control, the ability to control attention and maintain a goal-relevant behaviour, is suggested to play a key role in the relationships between anxiety/stress, attention to negative information, and cognitive performance. Yet, the evidence is limited and further investigation is needed. In the current thesis, the relations between anxiety/stress, attention to emotional information, and cognitive performance will be investigated in a multidisciplinary approach, synthesizing clinical and cognitive factors and neurobiological underpinnings, while focusing on the role of trait cognitive control. Show less
Self-control abilities are crucial for successful functioning in daily life. At the core of self-control lies the ability to intentionally inhibit one__s actions. Intentional inhibition differs... Show moreSelf-control abilities are crucial for successful functioning in daily life. At the core of self-control lies the ability to intentionally inhibit one__s actions. Intentional inhibition differs from externally driven inhibition in that it is driven by an internal thought process rather than an external stimulus that tells one to stop. The goal of this thesis was to examine the development of intentional inhibition and compare this with externally driven inhibition. In order to investigate the covert process of intentional inhibition, the research described in this thesis made use of neurobiological measures such as phasic heart rate changes and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In addition, to learn more about self-control in context, the final empirical chapter examined intentional and externally driven inhibition in the context of relevant and irrelevant emotions. Show less
The studies described in this thesis aimed to investigate how affect and motivation impact cognitive control, in terms of both behavior and brain activation. Six out of the eight empirical studies... Show moreThe studies described in this thesis aimed to investigate how affect and motivation impact cognitive control, in terms of both behavior and brain activation. Six out of the eight empirical studies found support for indirect effects on cognitive control, as measured with sequential trial-to-trial adaptations in cognitive control tasks. Only two studies resulted in evidence for a direct modulation of cognitive control (Chapter 4 and 9). Indirect effects occurred on trial-to-trial adaptation in cognitive control tasks involving a random presentation of compatible and incompatible trials. We found that conflict adaptation, the transient improvement of behavioral control after incompatible in comparison to compatible trials, was subject to affective regulation. In particular, we found that after incompatible trials, positive emotional states reduced and negative emotional states increased adaptation. These effects occurred for both short-term (Chapters 2 and 3) and long-term affect manipulations (Chapters 5, 6, and 7). Motivation and task difficulty also interacted with conflict adaptation (Chapter 8). The neuroimaging studies described in Chapter 3 and 6 demonstrate the role of fronto-striatal interactions in this affective regulation of cognitive control. Taken together, this thesis demonstrates the role that positive and negative emotions play in the adaptation of behavior and mental effort. Show less
The studies of this thesis provide empirical evidence that creativity is not a homogeneous concept; rather it reflects the interplay of separate, dissociable processes such as convergent and... Show moreThe studies of this thesis provide empirical evidence that creativity is not a homogeneous concept; rather it reflects the interplay of separate, dissociable processes such as convergent and divergent thinking (e.g., Guilford, 1967). The cognitive mechanism of these two processes is different, but not opposite as assumed by Eysenck (1993). The results suggest that divergent and convergent thinking are both related to dopamine, but to different degrees and in different ways. It was observed that eye-blink rate was predicting creative performance, which provides strong support for approaches that relate creativity to dopamine (Ashby et al., 1999). However, the obtained dissociation calls for a more differentiated approach that distinguishes between convergent and divergent processes and allows for tapping different creativity-dopamine functions. The findings of this thesis also suggest that convergent thinking induces a control state that emphasizes the top-down biasing of creative solutions and/or local competition between them, whereas divergent thinking is associated with reduced top-down control and/or local competition. Taken together, results of four studies presented in this thesis show that convergent and divergent thinking are not necessarily opposite but they are not the same either, and optimal performance in different types of creativity tasks requires different conditions. Show less
It is well known that complex mental abilities develop at least until late adolescence. Yet, there are also skills that children master perfectly, sometimes even better than adults. The goal of... Show moreIt is well known that complex mental abilities develop at least until late adolescence. Yet, there are also skills that children master perfectly, sometimes even better than adults. The goal of this thesis was to learn more about the possibilities of cognitive functioning in children and young adults, and the constraints set by the developing brain. An fMRI training approach was used to examine age- and experience-related effects in the development of working memory and resting-state functional connectivity. More specifically, we studied age differences on task performance and brain activation during a working memory task with various demands and difficulty levels, both before and after 6 weeks of practice with the task. In addition, to learn more about the interaction between different brain regions, we also examined age differences and practice effects on functional connectivity during resting-state. Show less
The studies described in this thesis address a range of topics related to arousal, exploration, temporal attention, and the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine (LC-NE) system. Chapters 2 and 3 report... Show moreThe studies described in this thesis address a range of topics related to arousal, exploration, temporal attention, and the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine (LC-NE) system. Chapters 2 and 3 report two studies that investigated a recent theory about the role of the LC-NE system in the regulation of the exploration-exploitation trade-off. Chapter 4 reports a study on neurocognitive function in patients with dopamine-β-hydroxylase (DβH) deficiency. Chapter 5 reports an fMRI study on the neural correlates of perceptual curiosity. Chapter 6 and 7 reported several experiments investigating the effects of ‘accessory stimuli’ and temporal certainty on information processing, using scalp electrophysiology and sequential-sampling models of decision making. Taken together, the studies reported in this thesis suggest that arousal, exploration and temporal attention are closely related, which is likely due to a shared neural basis. Show less
One of the most remarkable aspects of multimodal perception is its coherence. Our conscious perception is unified at any given moment, although we acquire information from diverse channels with... Show moreOne of the most remarkable aspects of multimodal perception is its coherence. Our conscious perception is unified at any given moment, although we acquire information from diverse channels with distinct transduction mechanisms, and process it in different cortical areas not necessarily at the same time and pace. The problem of how the brain integrates the different types of information, which are processed in distinct cortical regions to a unified event, is referred to in literature as the binding problem (Triesman, 1996). The current thesis reflects a gradual inquest in order to reveal different aspects of the binding mechanism across multimodal perception and action. The empirical evidence suggests that feature integration emerges in a graded manner through intra and inter connections within and across modalities and domains, employing general principles (such as temporal overlap of feature activation), which capture the role of attention, salience and dominance among the features and the domains. Also, control processes are important in handling retrieved traces for efficient use. Nevertheless, the binding mechanism does not require a conscious or unified perception and unified perception is not the outcome of feature binding. Show less
Top-down guidance of behavior in a complex and dynamically changing world is often based on information held in working memory. Such guidance serves to bias decision-making processes in directions... Show moreTop-down guidance of behavior in a complex and dynamically changing world is often based on information held in working memory. Such guidance serves to bias decision-making processes in directions consistent with externally set rules or internally maintained intentions. Orthogonal to this goal-driven guidance, decisions may be biased also by stimulus-driven factors, such as the automatic reactivation of episodic associations that accompanied the current stimulus in a previous instance. We investigated whether top-down and bottom-up processes account for variation in context based decision making as measured by the AX-CPT in a behavioral [1] and fMRI study [2]. Moreover, several behavioural studies have indicated that transiently induced positive affect modulates control processes in context-based decision making, generally leading to enhanced flexibility. Using ERPs in a classic AX-CPT, we studied the temporal dynamics of a positive affect induction on control processes in context-based decision making [3]. Additionally, we studied learning the associations between a situation, the response to it, and the outcome of that decision and the effect of basal ganglia modulations on this learning process by means of a Parkinson’s patient study. Studies [1] and [2] pointed out that in decisions with rapidly changing environmental demands, goal-driven preparation is often beneficial but may also hamper performance which can be overcome by applying increased control. Moreover, this top-down bias is regulated more efficiently when the specific stimulus is presented in the same context it was previously associated with, compared to when it is presented in a new and unusual context. Additionally, fMRI study shed light on the way these stimulus-driven performance changes may be represented in the brain. Study [3] showed that a positive affect induction influenced reactive and evaluative components of control (indexed by the N2 elicited by the target, and by the Error-Related Negativity elicited after incorrect responses) in an AX-CPT task, whereas cue-induced preparation and maintenance processes remained largely unaffected (as reflected in the P3b and the Contingent Negative Variation components of the ERP). The patient studies suggest that moderate dopaminergic medication and STN stimulation in Parkinson’s patients [chapter 5,6] both improve learning functions relying on caudate and putamen. However, the improvement induced by dopaminergic medication largely depended on individual patient characteristics. Show less