» Articles » PMID: 14526085

Performance Monitoring by the Anterior Cingulate Cortex During Saccade Countermanding

Overview
Journal Science
Specialty Science
Date 2003 Oct 4
PMID 14526085
Citations 271
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Consensus is emerging that the medial frontal lobe of the brain is involved in monitoring performance, but precisely what is monitored remains unclear. A saccade-countermanding task affords an experimental dissociation of neural signals of error, reinforcement, and conflict. Single-unit activity was monitored in the anterior cingulate cortex of monkeys performing this task. Neurons that signaled errors were found, half of which responded to the omission of earned reinforcement. A further diversity of neurons signaled earned or unexpected reinforcement. No neurons signaled the form of conflict engendered by interruption of saccade preparation produced in this task. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the anterior cingulate cortex monitors the consequences of actions.

Citing Articles

Parietal cortex is recruited by frontal and cingulate areas to support action monitoring and updating during stopping.

Kang J, Mattar L, Vergara J, Gobo V, Rey H, Heilbronner S bioRxiv. 2025; .

PMID: 40060422 PMC: 11888462. DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.28.640787.


Anterior cingulate cortex in complex associative learning: monitoring action state and action content.

Huang W, Hall A, Kawalec N, Opalka A, Liu J, Wang D bioRxiv. 2025; .

PMID: 39975180 PMC: 11838375. DOI: 10.1101/2025.01.29.635442.


Prediction-error signals in anterior cingulate cortex drive task-switching.

Cole N, Harvey M, Myers-Joseph D, Gilra A, Khan A Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):7088.

PMID: 39154045 PMC: 11330528. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-51368-9.


Neurons of Macaque Frontal Eye Field Signal Reward-Related Surprise.

Shteyn M, Olson C J Neurosci. 2024; 44(38).

PMID: 39107059 PMC: 11411596. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0441-24.2024.


Error-related brain activity shapes the association between trait neuroticism and internalizing symptomatology in two tasks.

Harold R, Hill K, Kamat R, Perlman G, Kotov R, Ruggero C Int J Psychophysiol. 2024; 204:112404.

PMID: 39047794 PMC: 11384294. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2024.112404.