Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
924134 Brain and Cognition 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Localization of mental model related brain regions.•TMS-Study for spatial reasoning.•Superior parietal cortex relevant for uncertain relational reasoning process.•Region relevant for alternating mental models; less for constructing mental models.•Influence of Working Memory capacity on TMS-stimulation.

The psychology of reasoning is currently transitioning from the study of deductive inferences under certainty to inferences that have degrees of uncertainty in both their premises and conclusions; however, only a few studies have explored the cortical basis of uncertain reasoning. Using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), we show that areas in the right superior parietal lobe (rSPL) are necessary for solving spatial relational reasoning problems under conditions of uncertainty. Twenty-four participants had to decide whether a single presented order of objects agreed with a given set of indeterminate premises that could be interpreted in more than one way. During the presentation of the order, 10-Hz TMS was applied over the rSPL or a sham control site. Right SPL TMS during the inference phase disrupted performance in uncertain relational reasoning. Moreover, we found differences in the error rates between preferred mental models, alternative models, and inconsistent models. Our results suggest that different mechanisms are involved when people reason spatially and evaluate different kinds of uncertain conclusions.

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