Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Feb 2011)

Cognitive control in majority search: A computational modeling approach

  • Hongbin eWang,
  • Hongbin eWang,
  • Xun eLiu,
  • Xun eLiu,
  • Jin eFan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2011.00016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Despite the importance of cognitive control in many cognitive tasks involving uncertainty, the computational mechanisms of cognitive control in response to uncertainty remain unclear. In this study, we develop biologically realistic neural network models to investigate the instantiation of cognitive control in a majority function task, where one determines the category to which the majority of items in a group belong. Two models are constructed, both of which include the same set of modules representing task-relevant brain functions and share the same model structure. However, with a critical change of a model parameter setting, the two models implement two different underlying algorithms: one for grouping search (where a subgroup of items are sampled and re-sampled until a congruent sample is found) and the other for self-terminating search (where the items are scanned and counted one-by-one until the majority is decided). The two algorithms hold distinct implications for the involvement of cognitive control. The modeling results show that while both models are able to perform the task, the grouping search model fit the human data better than the self-terminating search model. An examination of the dynamics underlying model performance reveals how cognitive control might be instantiated in the brain via the V4-ACC-LPFC-IPS loop for computing the majority function.

Keywords