RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Hierarchical Cognition Causes Task-Related Deactivations but Not Just in Default Mode Regions JF eneuro JO eNeuro FD Society for Neuroscience SP ENEURO.0008-18.2018 DO 10.1523/ENEURO.0008-18.2018 VO 5 IS 6 A1 Ausaf A. Farooqui A1 Tom Manly YR 2018 UL http://www.eneuro.org/content/5/6/ENEURO.0008-18.2018.abstract AB The well-known deactivation of the default mode network (DMN) during external tasks is usually thought to reflect the suppression of internally directed mental activity during external attention. In three experiments with human participants we organized sequences of task events identical in their attentional and control demands into larger task episodes. We found that DMN deactivation across such sequential events was never constant, but was maximum at the beginning of the episode, then decreased gradually across the episode, reaching baseline towards episode completion, with the final event of the episode eliciting an activation. Crucially, this pattern of activity was not limited to a fixed set of DMN regions but, across experiments, was shown by a variable set of regions expected to be uninvolved in processing the ongoing task. This change in deactivation across sequential but identical events showed that the deactivation cannot be related to attentional/control demands which were constant across the episode, instead, it has to be related to some episode related load that was maximal at the beginning and then decreased gradually as parts of the episode got executed. We argue that this load resulted from cognitive programs through which the entire episode was hierarchically executed as one unit. At the beginning of task episodes, programs related to their entire duration is assembled, causing maximal deactivation. As execution proceeds, elements within the program related to the completed parts of the episode dismantle, thereby decreasing the program load and causing a decrease in deactivation.