Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Jul 2011)

Specialisation in the human brain: the case of numbers

  • Roi eCohen Kadosh,
  • Bahador eBahrami,
  • Bahador eBahrami,
  • Vincent eWalsh,
  • Brian eButterworth,
  • Tudor ePopescu,
  • Cathy J Price

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2011.00062
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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How numerical representation is encoded in the adult human brain is important for a basic understanding of human brain organization, its typical and atypical development, its evolutionary precursors, cognitive architectures, education and rehabilitation. Previous studies have shown that numerical processing activates the same intraparietal regions irrespective of the presentation format (e.g. symbolic digits or non-symbolic dot arrays). This has led to claims that there is a single format independent, numerical representation. In the current study we used a functional magnetic resonance adaptation paradigm, and effective connectivity analysis to re-examine whether numerical processing in the intraparietal sulci is dependent or independent on the format of the stimuli. We obtained two novel results. First, the whole brain analysis revealed that format change (e.g., from dots to digits), in the absence of a change in magnitude, activated the same intraparietal regions as magnitude change, but to a greater degree. Second, using dynamic causal modeling (DCM) as a tool to disentangle neuronal specialization across regions that are commonly activated, we found that the connectivity between the left and right intraparietal sulci is format-dependent. Together, this line of results supports the idea that numerical representation is subserved by multiple mechanisms within the same parietal regions.

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