Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
Abstract: Fluid intelligence (gf) refers to abstract reasoning and problem solving abilities. It is considered
a human higher cognitive factor central to general intelligence (g). The regions of the cortex supporting
gf have been revealed by recent bioimaging studies and valuable hypothesis on the neural correlates
of individual differences have been proposed. However, little is known about the interaction
between individual variability in gf and variation in cortical activity following task complexity increase.
To further investigate this, two samples of participants (high-IQ, N 5 8; low-IQ, N 5 10) with significant
differences in gf underwent two reasoning (moderate and complex) tasks and a control task
adapted from the Raven progressive matrices. Functional magnetic resonance was used and the
recorded signal analyzed between and within the groups. The present study revealed two opposite patterns
of neural activity variation which were probably a reflection of the overall differences in cognitive
resource modulation: when complexity increased, high-IQ subjects showed a signal enhancement in
some frontal and parietal regions, whereas low-IQ subjects revealed a decreased activity in the same
areas. Moreover, a direct comparison between the groups’ activation patterns revealed a greater neural
activity in the low-IQ sample when conducting moderate task, with a strong involvement of medial
and lateral frontal regions thus suggesting that the recruitment of executive functioning might be different
between the groups. This study provides evidence for neural differences in facing reasoning
complexity among subjects with different gf level that are mediated by specific patterns of activation of
the underlying fronto-parietal network.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Perfetti, Bernardo; Saggino, Aristide; Ferretti, Antonio; Caulo, Massimo; Romani, Gian Luca; Onofrj, Marco
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