Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 63, Issue 1, 15 October 2012, Pages 392-402
NeuroImage

Selection and inhibition mechanisms for human voluntary action decisions

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2012.06.058Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

One can choose between action alternatives that have no apparent difference in their outcomes. Such voluntary action decisions are associated with widespread frontal–parietal activation, and a tendency to inhibit the repetition of a previous action. However, the mechanism of initiating voluntary actions and the functions of different brain regions during this process remains largely unknown. Here, we combine computational modeling and functional magnetic resonance imaging to test the selection and inhibition mechanisms that mediate trial-to-trial voluntary action decisions. We fitted an optimized accumulator model to behavioral responses in a finger-tapping task in which participants were instructed to make chosen actions or specified actions. Model parameters derived from each individual were then applied to estimate the expected accumulated metabolic activity (EAA) engaged in every single trial. The EAA was associated with blood oxygenation level-dependent responses in a decision work that was maximal in the supplementary motor area and the caudal anterior cingulate cortex, consistent with a competitive accumulation-to-threshold mechanism for action decision by these regions. Furthermore, specific inhibition of the previous action's accumulator was related to the suppression of response repetition. This action-specific inhibition correlated with the activity of the right inferior frontal gyrus, when the option to repeat existed. Our findings suggest that human voluntary action decisions are mediated by complementary processes of intentional selection and inhibition.

Highlights

► An accumulation-to-threshold mechanism supports human voluntary action decisions. ► The decision network is maximal in the medial frontal cortex. ► Suppression of repetition is mediated by the right inferior frontal gyrus.

Keywords

Decision making
Inhibition
Volition
Accumulation
fMRI
Modeling

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