Access to Deductive Logic Depends on a Right Ventromedial Prefrontal Area Devoted to Emotion and Feeling: Evidence from a Training Paradigm

Does the human capacity for access to deductive logic depend on emotion and feeling? With positron emission tomography, we compared the brain networks recruited by two groups of subjects who were either able or not able to shift from errors to logical responses in a deductive reasoning task. They were scanned twice while performing the same task, before and after a training session. The error-to-logical shift occurred in a group that underwent logicoemotional training but not in the other group, trained in logic only-a "cold" kind of training. The intergroup comparison pointed out that access to deductive logic involved a right ventromedial prefrontal area known to be devoted to emotion and feeling.

[1]  Hanna Damasio,et al.  Impairment of social and moral behavior related to early damage in human prefrontal cortex , 1999, Nature Neuroscience.

[2]  B. Postle,et al.  Prefrontal cortical contributions to working memory: evidence from event-related fMRI studies , 2000, Experimental Brain Research.

[3]  Lauren B. Adamson The neo-Piagetian theories of cognitive development: Demetriou, Andreas (Ed.). The neo-Piagetian theories of cognitive development: Toward an integration. Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1988. , 1990 .

[4]  Karl J. Friston,et al.  Spatial registration and normalization of images , 1995 .

[5]  M. Botvinick,et al.  Anterior cingulate cortex, error detection, and the online monitoring of performance. , 1998, Science.

[6]  A. Damasio,et al.  Deciding Advantageously Before Knowing the Advantageous Strategy , 1997, Science.

[7]  J. Harlow Passage of an Iron Rod Through the Head , 1999 .

[8]  Jean Piaget Piaget’s Theory , 1976 .

[9]  A. Owen The Functional Organization of Working Memory Processes Within Human Lateral Frontal Cortex: The Contribution of Functional Neuroimaging , 1997, The European journal of neuroscience.

[10]  René Descartes,et al.  The Philosophical Writings of Descartes: Rules for the Direction of the Mind , 1985 .

[11]  F. N. Dempster,et al.  Interference and inhibition in cognition: An historical perspective , 1995 .

[12]  J. Mazziotta,et al.  Automated image registration , 1993 .

[13]  A. Damasio Descartes’ Error. Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain. New York (Grosset/Putnam) 1994. , 1994 .

[14]  I. Sigel,et al.  HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY , 2006 .

[15]  Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al.  Mechanisms of directed attention in the human extrastriate cortex as revealed by functional MRI. , 1998, Science.

[16]  J. Cohen,et al.  Dissociating the role of the dorsolateral prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex in cognitive control. , 2000, Science.

[17]  S. Kapur,et al.  The seats of reason? An imaging study of deductive and inductive reasoning , 1997, Neuroreport.

[18]  Olivier Houdé,et al.  Inhibition and cognitive development: object, number, categorization, and reasoning , 2000 .

[19]  J. S. Evans,et al.  REASONING WITH NEGATIVES , 1972 .

[20]  A. Damasio,et al.  Preserved access and processing of social knowledge in a patient with acquired sociopathy due to ventromedial frontal damage , 1991, Neuropsychologia.

[21]  David LaBerge,et al.  Thalamic and Cortical Mechanisms of Attention Suggested by Recent Positron Emission Tomographic Experiments , 1990, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[22]  M. Posner,et al.  Cognitive and emotional influences in anterior cingulate cortex , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[23]  O. Houdé,et al.  Deductive reasoning and experimental inhibition training : the case of the matching bias , 1996 .

[24]  A. Damasio,et al.  The return of Phineas Gage: clues about the brain from the skull of a famous patient. , 1994, Science.

[25]  H. Damasio,et al.  Dissociation Of Working Memory from Decision Making within the Human Prefrontal Cortex , 1998, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[26]  Scott T. Grafton,et al.  Automated image registration: I. General methods and intrasubject, intramodality validation. , 1998, Journal of computer assisted tomography.

[27]  A. Damasio The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness , 1999 .

[28]  Jonathan St. B. T. Evans,et al.  Matching bias in conditional reasoning : Do we understand it after 25 years ? , 1998 .

[29]  P C Wason,et al.  Reasoning about a Rule , 1968, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[30]  S. Kosslyn Image and Brain , 1994 .

[31]  A. Damasio Descartes' error: emotion, reason, and the human brain. avon books , 1994 .

[32]  Vinod Goel,et al.  Neuroanatomical Correlates of Human Reasoning , 1998, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[33]  Laure Zago,et al.  Shifting from the Perceptual Brain to the Logical Brain: The Neural Impact of Cognitive Inhibition Training , 2000, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.