Neural dynamics of cognitive control: Current tensions and future promise
Dale Zhou, Danielle Cosme, Yoona Kang, Ovidia Stanoi, David M. Lydon-Staley, Peter J. Mucha, Emily B. Falk, Kevin N. Ochsner, Dani S. Bassett

TL;DR
This paper reviews the neural basis of cognitive control, highlighting how network control theory offers new insights into brain region roles, dynamics, and the integration of control models for understanding goal-directed behavior.
Contribution
It introduces network control theory as a novel framework for understanding neural control processes, integrating prior models and providing new mathematical tools.
Findings
Controllers are regions with strongly connected recurrent anatomy.
Network control theory predicts control signals' timing and location.
The approach offers graded predictions of control across brain regions.
Abstract
Cognitive control is a suite of processes that helps individuals pursue goals despite resistance or uncertainty about what to do. Although cognitive control has been extensively studied as a dynamic feedback loop of perception, valuation, and action, it remains incompletely understood as a cohesive dynamic and distributed neural process. Here, we critically examine the history of and advances in the study of cognitive control, including how metaphors and cultural norms of power, morality, and rationality are intertwined with definitions of control, to consider holistically how different models explain which brain regions act as controllers. Controllers, the source of top-down signals, are typically localized in regions whose neural activations implement elementary component processes of control, including conflict monitoring and behavioral inhibition. Top-down signals from these regions…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Action Observation and Synchronization
