Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Chapter (peer-reviewed)
Cognition and the inhibitory control of saccades in Schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease. / Crawford, Trevor.
The brain's eye : neurobiological and clinical aspects of oculomotor research . ed. / J. Hyönä. Vol. 140 Amsterdam : Elsevier, 2002. p. 449-466 (Progress in brain research; Vol. 140).Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Chapter (peer-reviewed)
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Cognition and the inhibitory control of saccades in Schizophrenia and Parkinson’s disease
AU - Crawford, Trevor
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - Historically, various lines of evidence have converged on the view that the brain expends much of its neural resources on inhibiting its own activity in a critical step towards the cognitive control of behaviour. The loss of inhibitory control is widely reported in neurological and psychiatric disorders however, the consequences of reduced inhibition in terms of wider cognitive effects on cognitive control operations such as planning, abstract thought, working memory and the ability to appreciate the perspective of others (‘theory of mind’) has been widely overlooked. The antisaccade paradigm examines the conflict between a prepotent stimulus that produces a powerful urge to fixate the target,and the overriding goal to ‘look’ in the opposite direction. In this chapter we illustrate how this paradigm is increasingly used to explore the relationship of inhibitory control and cognition in Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia and healthy participants. Evidence is presented that is consistent with the theory of cognitive inhibition as a distinct process that can be dissociated from working memory. We conclude that the inhibitory control of saccadic eye movement should be studied in the wider context of cognitive operations.
AB - Historically, various lines of evidence have converged on the view that the brain expends much of its neural resources on inhibiting its own activity in a critical step towards the cognitive control of behaviour. The loss of inhibitory control is widely reported in neurological and psychiatric disorders however, the consequences of reduced inhibition in terms of wider cognitive effects on cognitive control operations such as planning, abstract thought, working memory and the ability to appreciate the perspective of others (‘theory of mind’) has been widely overlooked. The antisaccade paradigm examines the conflict between a prepotent stimulus that produces a powerful urge to fixate the target,and the overriding goal to ‘look’ in the opposite direction. In this chapter we illustrate how this paradigm is increasingly used to explore the relationship of inhibitory control and cognition in Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia and healthy participants. Evidence is presented that is consistent with the theory of cognitive inhibition as a distinct process that can be dissociated from working memory. We conclude that the inhibitory control of saccadic eye movement should be studied in the wider context of cognitive operations.
M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)
SN - 9780444510976
VL - 140
T3 - Progress in brain research
SP - 449
EP - 466
BT - The brain's eye
A2 - Hyönä, J.
PB - Elsevier
CY - Amsterdam
ER -