Behavioral Sciences (Nov 2020)

Brain Activations and Functional Connectivity Patterns Associated with Insight-Based and Analytical Anagram Solving

  • Dmitry O. Sinitsyn,
  • Ilya S. Bakulin,
  • Alexandra G. Poydasheva,
  • Liudmila A. Legostaeva,
  • Elena I. Kremneva,
  • Dmitry Yu. Lagoda,
  • Andrey Yu. Chernyavskiy,
  • Alexey A. Medyntsev,
  • Natalia A. Suponeva,
  • Michael A. Piradov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bs10110170
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 170

Abstract

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Insight is one of the most mysterious problem-solving phenomena involving the sudden emergence of a solution, often preceded by long unproductive attempts to find it. This seemingly unexplainable generation of the answer, together with the role attributed to insight in the advancement of science, technology and culture, stimulate active research interest in discovering its neuronal underpinnings. The present study employs functional Magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to probe and compare the brain activations occurring in the course of solving anagrams by insight or analytically, as judged by the subjects. A number of regions were activated in both strategies, including the left premotor cortex, left claustrum, and bilateral clusters in the precuneus and middle temporal gyrus. The activated areas span the majority of the clusters reported in a recent meta-analysis of insight-related fMRI studies. At the same time, the activation patterns were very similar between the insight and analytical solutions, with the only difference in the right sensorimotor region probably explainable by subject motion related to the study design. Additionally, we applied resting-state fMRI to study functional connectivity patterns correlated with the individual frequency of insight anagram solutions. Significant correlations were found for the seed-based connectivity of areas in the left premotor cortex, left claustrum, and left frontal eye field. The results stress the need for optimizing insight paradigms with respect to the accuracy and reliability of the subjective insight/analytical solution classification. Furthermore, the short-lived nature of the insight phenomenon makes it difficult to capture the associated neural events with the current experimental techniques and motivates complementing such studies by the investigation of the structural and functional brain features related to the individual differences in the frequency of insight-based decisions.

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