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  4. Sustained enhancements in inhibitory control depend primarily on the reinforcement of fronto-basal anatomical connectivity
 
research article

Sustained enhancements in inhibitory control depend primarily on the reinforcement of fronto-basal anatomical connectivity

Chavan, Camille
•
Mouthon, Michael
•
Simonet, Marie
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2017
Brain structure & function

What are the neurophysiological determinants of sustained supra-normal inhibitory control performance? We addressed this question by coupling multimodal neuroimaging and behavioral investigations of experts in fencing who underwent more than 20,000 h of inhibitory control training over 15 years. The superior control of the experts manifested behaviorally as a speeding-up of inhibition processes during a Go/NoGo task and was accompanied by changes in bilateral inferior frontal white matter microstructure. In the expert group, inhibition performance correlated positively with the fractional anisotropy (FA) of white matter tracts projecting to the basal ganglia, and the total training load with the FA in supplementary motor areas. Critically, the experts showed no changes in grey matter volume or in the functional organization of the fronto-basal inhibitory control network. The fencers' performance and neural activity during a 2-back working memory task did not differ from those of the controls, ensuring that their expertise was specific to inhibitory control. Our results indicate that while phasic changes in the patterns of neural activity and grey matter architecture accompany inhibitory control improvement after short- to medium- term training, long-lasting inhibitory control improvements primarily depend on the reinforcement of fronto-basal structural connectivity.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1007/s00429-015-1156-y
Web of Science ID

WOS:000392292100037

Author(s)
Chavan, Camille
Mouthon, Michael
Simonet, Marie
Hoogewoud, Henri-Marcel
Draganski, Bogdan
van der Zwaag, Wietske  
Spierer, Lucas
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Springer Heidelberg

Published in
Brain structure & function
Volume

222

Issue

1

Start page

635

End page

643

Subjects

CIBM-AIT

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CIBM  
Available on Infoscience
December 17, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/121804
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