The Neurocognitive Cost of Enhancing Cognition with Methylphenidate: Improved Distractor Resistance but Impaired Updating
Publication year
2017Number of pages
12 p.
Source
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 29, 4, (2017), pp. 652-663ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
PI Group Motivational & Cognitive Control
Psychiatry
Journal title
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Volume
vol. 29
Issue
iss. 4
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 652
Page end
p. 663
Subject
170 000 Motivational & Cognitive Control; Radboudumc 13: Stress-related disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
A balance has to be struck between supporting distractor-resistant representations in working memory and allowing those representations to be updated. Catecholamine, particularly dopamine, transmission has been proposed to modulate the balance between the stability and flexibility of working memory representations. However, it is unclear whether drugs that increase catecholamine transmission, such as methylphenidate, optimize this balance in a task-dependent manner or bias the system toward stability at the expense of flexibility (or vice versa). Here we demonstrate, using pharmacological fMRI, that methylphenidate improves the ability to resist distraction (cognitive stability) but impairs the ability to flexibly update items currently held in working memory (cognitive flexibility). These behavioral effects were accompanied by task-general effects in the striatum and opposite and task-specific effects on neural signal in the pFC. This suggests that methylphenidate exerts its cognitive enhancing and impairing effects through acting on the pFC, an effect likely associated with methylphenidate's action on the striatum. These findings highlight that methylphenidate acts as a double-edged sword, improving one cognitive function at the expense of another, while also elucidating the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying these paradoxical effects.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [229289]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3665]
- Electronic publications [111675]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [87821]
- Open Access publications [80476]
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