Theodoros Karapanagiotidis
University of York
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Featured researches published by Theodoros Karapanagiotidis.
NeuroImage | 2016
James Davey; Hannah E. Thompson; Glyn Hallam; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Charlotte Murphy; Irene de Caso; Katya Krieger-Redwood; Boris C. Bernhardt; Jonathan Smallwood; Elizabeth Jefferies
Making sense of the world around us depends upon selectively retrieving information relevant to our current goal or context. However, it is unclear whether selective semantic retrieval relies exclusively on general control mechanisms recruited in demanding non-semantic tasks, or instead on systems specialised for the control of meaning. One hypothesis is that the left posterior middle temporal gyrus (pMTG) is important in the controlled retrieval of semantic (not non-semantic) information; however this view remains controversial since a parallel literature links this site to event and relational semantics. In a functional neuroimaging study, we demonstrated that an area of pMTG implicated in semantic control by a recent meta-analysis was activated in a conjunction of (i) semantic association over size judgements and (ii) action over colour feature matching. Under these circumstances the same region showed functional coupling with the inferior frontal gyrus — another crucial site for semantic control. Structural and functional connectivity analyses demonstrated that this site is at the nexus of networks recruited in automatic semantic processing (the default mode network) and executively demanding tasks (the multiple-demand network). Moreover, in both task and task-free contexts, pMTG exhibited functional properties that were more similar to ventral parts of inferior frontal cortex, implicated in controlled semantic retrieval, than more dorsal inferior frontal sulcus, implicated in domain-general control. Finally, the pMTG region was functionally correlated at rest with other regions implicated in control-demanding semantic tasks, including inferior frontal gyrus and intraparietal sulcus. We suggest that pMTG may play a crucial role within a large-scale network that allows the integration of automatic retrieval in the default mode network with executively-demanding goal-oriented cognition, and that this could support our ability to understand actions and non-dominant semantic associations, allowing semantic retrieval to be ‘shaped’ to suit a task or context.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Jonathan Smallwood; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Florence J. M. Ruby; Barbara Medea; Irene de Caso; Mahiko Konishi; Hao-Ting Wang; Glyn Hallam; Daniel S. Margulies; Elizabeth Jefferies
When not engaged in the moment, we often spontaneously represent people, places and events that are not present in the environment. Although this capacity has been linked to the default mode network (DMN), it remains unclear how interactions between the nodes of this network give rise to particular mental experiences during spontaneous thought. One hypothesis is that the core of the DMN integrates information from medial and lateral temporal lobe memory systems, which represent different aspects of knowledge. Individual differences in the connectivity between temporal lobe regions and the default mode network core would then predict differences in the content and form of people’s spontaneous thoughts. This study tested this hypothesis by examining the relationship between seed-based functional connectivity and the contents of spontaneous thought recorded in a laboratory study several days later. Variations in connectivity from both medial and lateral temporal lobe regions was associated with different patterns of spontaneous thought and these effects converged on an overlapping region in the posterior cingulate cortex. We propose that the posterior core of the DMN acts as a representational hub that integrates information represented in medial and lateral temporal lobe and this process is important in determining the content and form of spontaneous thought.
Experimental Brain Research | 2018
Barbara Medea; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Mahiko Konishi; Cristina Ottaviani; Daniel S. Margulies; Andrea Bernasconi; Neda Bernasconi; Boris C. Bernhardt; Elizabeth Jefferies; Jonathan Smallwood
Human cognition is not limited to the available environmental input but can consider realities that are different to the here and now. We describe the cognitive states and neural processes linked to the refinement of descriptions of personal goals. When personal goals became concrete, participants reported greater thoughts about the self and the future during mind-wandering. This pattern was not observed for descriptions of TV programmes. Connectivity analysis of participants who underwent a resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scan revealed neural traits associated with this pattern. Strong hippocampal connectivity with ventromedial pre-frontal cortex was common to better-specified descriptions of goals and TV programmes, while connectivity between hippocampus and the pre-supplementary motor area was associated with individuals whose goals were initially abstract but became more concrete over the course of the experiment. We conclude that self-generated cognition that arises during the mind-wandering state can allow goals to be refined, and this depends on neural systems anchored in the hippocampus.
NeuroImage | 2017
Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Boris C. Bernhardt; Elizabeth Jefferies; Jonathan Smallwood
ABSTRACT The capacity to imagine situations that have already happened or fictitious events that may take place in the future is known as mental time travel (MTT). Studies have shown that MTT is an important aspect of spontaneous thought, yet we lack a clear understanding of how the neurocognitive architecture of the brain constrains this element of human cognition. Previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have shown that MTT involves the coordination between multiple regions that include mesiotemporal structures such as the hippocampus, as well as prefrontal and parietal regions commonly associated with the default mode network (DMN). The current study used a multimodal neuroimaging approach to identify the structural and functional brain organisation that underlies individual differences in the capacity to spontaneously engage in MTT. Using regionally unconstrained diffusion tractography analysis, we found increased diffusion anisotropy in right lateralised temporo‐limbic, corticospinal, inferior fronto‐occipital tracts in participants who reported greater MTT. Probabilistic connectivity mapping revealed a significantly higher connection probability of the right hippocampus with these tracts. Resting‐state functional MRI connectivity analysis using the right hippocampus as a seed region revealed greater functional coupling to the anterior regions of the DMN with increasing levels of MTT. These findings demonstrate that the interactions between the hippocampus and regions of the cortex underlie the capacity to engage in MTT, and support contemporary theoretical accounts that suggest that the integration of the hippocampus with the DMN provides the neurocognitive landscape that allows us to imagine distant times and places. HIGHLIGHTSWhite matter tracts highly connected to the right hippocampus underlie individual variation in spontaneous mental time travel.Spontaneous mental time travel linked to integration between the hippocampus and the default mode network.Confirmation of component process accounts that argue for a role of episodic memory in the mind‐wandering state.Elements of spontaneous thought are constrained by structural and functional brain network organisation.
NeuroImage | 2016
Katya Krieger-Redwood; Elizabeth Jefferies; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Robert Seymour; Adonany Nunes; Jit Wei Aaron Ang; Vierra Majernikova; Giovanna Mollo; Jonathan Smallwood
The posterior cingulate cortex (pCC) often deactivates during complex tasks, and at rest is often only weakly correlated with regions that play a general role in the control of cognition. These observations led to the hypothesis that pCC contributes to automatic aspects of memory retrieval and cognition. Recent work, however, has suggested that the pCC may support both automatic and controlled forms of memory processing and may do so by changing its communication with regions that are important in the control of cognition across multiple domains. The current study examined these alternative views by characterising the functional coupling of the pCC in easy semantic decisions (based on strong global associations) and in harder semantic tasks (matching words on the basis of specific non-dominant features). Increasingly difficult semantic decisions led to the expected pattern of deactivation in the pCC; however, psychophysiological interaction analysis revealed that, under these conditions, the pCC exhibited greater connectivity with dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC), relative to both easier semantic decisions and to a period of rest. In a second experiment using different participants, we found that functional coupling at rest between the pCC and the same region of dorsolateral PFC was stronger for participants who were more efficient at semantic tasks when assessed in a subsequent laboratory session. Thus, although overall levels of activity in the pCC are reduced during external tasks, this region may show greater coupling with executive control regions when information is retrieved from memory in a goal-directed manner.
NeuroImage | 2015
Daniel H. Baker; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; David Coggan; Kirstie Wailes-Newson; Jonathan Smallwood
Bistable stimuli, such as the Necker Cube, demonstrate that experience can change in the absence of changes in the environment. Such phenomena can be used to assess stimulus-independent aspects of conscious experience. The current study used resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) to index stimulus-independent changes in neural activity to understand the neural architecture that determines dominance durations during bistable perception (using binocular rivalry and Necker cube stimuli). Anterior regions of the Superior Parietal Lobule (SPL) exhibited robust connectivity with regions of primary sensorimotor cortex. The strength of this regions connectivity with the striatum predicted shorter dominance durations during binocular rivalry, whereas its connectivity to pre-motor cortex predicted longer dominance durations for the Necker Cube. Posterior regions of the SPL, on the other hand, were coupled to associative cortex in the temporal and frontal lobes. The posterior SPLs connectivity to the temporal lobe predicted longer dominance during binocular rivalry. In conjunction with prior work, these data suggest that the anterior SPL contributes to perceptual rivalry through the inhibition of incongruent bottom up information, whereas the posterior SPL influences rivalry by supporting the current interpretation of a bistable stimulus. Our data suggests that the functional connectivity of the SPL with regions of sensory, motor, and associative cortex allows it to regulate the interpretation of the environment that forms the focus of conscious attention at a specific moment in time.
NeuroImage | 2017
Charlotte Murphy; Shirley-Ann Rueschemeyer; David Watson; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Jonathan Smallwood; Elizabeth Jefferies
ABSTRACT Words activate cortical regions in accordance with their modality of presentation (i.e., written vs. spoken), yet there is a long‐standing debate about whether patterns of activity in any specific brain region capture modality‐invariant conceptual information. Deficits in patients with semantic dementia highlight the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) as an amodal store of semantic knowledge but these studies do not permit precise localisation of this function. The current investigation used multiple imaging methods in healthy participants to examine functional dissociations within ATL. Multi‐voxel pattern analysis identified spatially segregated regions: a response to input modality in anterior superior temporal gyrus (aSTG) and a response to meaning in more ventral anterior temporal lobe (vATL). This functional dissociation was supported by resting‐state connectivity that found greater coupling for aSTG with primary auditory cortex and vATL with the default mode network. A meta‐analytic decoding of these connectivity patterns implicated aSTG in processes closely tied to auditory processing (such as phonology and language) and vATL in meaning‐based tasks (such as comprehension or social cognition). Thus we provide converging evidence for the segregation of meaning and input modality in the ATL. HIGHLIGHTSMulti‐voxel pattern analysis identified spatially segregated regions in the anterior temporal lobe.Anterior superior temporal gyrus (aSTG) responded to modality input.Ventral anterior temporal lobe (vATL) responded to semantic meaning.Converging findings from resting‐state connectivity supports this functional dissociation.
NeuroImage | 2017
Deniz Vatansever; Danilo Bzdok; Hao-Ting Wang; Giovanna Mollo; Mladen Sormaz; Charlotte Murphy; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Jonathan Smallwood; Elizabeth Jefferies
Contemporary theories assume that semantic cognition emerges from a neural architecture in which different component processes are combined to produce aspects of conceptual thought and behaviour. In addition to the state-level, momentary variation in brain connectivity, individuals may also differ in their propensity to generate particular configurations of such components, and these trait-level differences may relate to individual differences in semantic cognition. We tested this view by exploring how variation in intrinsic brain functional connectivity between semantic nodes in fMRI was related to performance on a battery of semantic tasks in 154 healthy participants. Through simultaneous decomposition of brain functional connectivity and semantic task performance, we identified distinct components of semantic cognition at rest. In a subsequent validation step, these data-driven components demonstrated explanatory power for neural responses in an fMRI-based semantic localiser task and variation in self-generated thoughts during the resting-state scan. Our findings showed that good performance on harder semantic tasks was associated with relative segregation at rest between frontal brain regions implicated in controlled semantic retrieval and the default mode network. Poor performance on easier tasks was linked to greater coupling between the same frontal regions and the anterior temporal lobe; a pattern associated with deliberate, verbal thematic thoughts at rest. We also identified components that related to qualities of semantic cognition: relatively good performance on pictorial semantic tasks was associated with greater separation of angular gyrus from frontal control sites and greater integration with posterior cingulate and anterior temporal cortex. In contrast, good speech production was linked to the separation of angular gyrus, posterior cingulate and temporal lobe regions. Together these data show that quantitative and qualitative variation in semantic cognition across individuals emerges from variations in the interaction of nodes within distinct functional brain networks.
NeuroImage | 2017
Mladen Sormaz; Elizabeth Jefferies; Boris C. Bernhardt; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Giovanna Mollo; Neda Bernasconi; Andrea Bernasconi; Tom Hartley; Jonathan Smallwood
ABSTRACT The hippocampus contributes to episodic, spatial and semantic aspects of memory, yet individual differences within and between these functions are not well‐understood. In 136 healthy individuals, we investigated whether these differences reflect variation in the strength of connections between functionally‐specialised segments of the hippocampus and diverse cortical regions that participate in different aspects of memory. Better topographical memory was associated with stronger connectivity between lingual gyrus and left anterior, rather than posterior, hippocampus. Better semantic memory was associated with increased connectivity between the intracalcarine/cuneus and left, rather than right, posterior hippocampus. Notably, we observed a double dissociation between semantic and topographical memory: better semantic memory was associated with stronger connectivity between left temporoparietal cortex and left anterior hippocampus, while better topographic memory was linked to stronger connectivity with right anterior hippocampus. Together these data support a division‐of‐labour account of hippocampal functioning: at the population level, differences in connectivity across the hippocampus reflect functional specialisation for different facets of memory, while variation in these connectivity patterns across individuals is associated with differences in the capacity to retrieve different types of information. In particular, within‐hemisphere connectivity between hippocampus and left temporoparietal cortex supports conceptual processing at the expense of spatial ability. HighlightsAnatomical segments of hippocampus (HC) have unique functional connectivity profiles.It is hypothesised that these reflect a role for HC in episodic, semantic and topographic memory.We tested the relation between HC connectivity and variation in different memory abilities.Anterior HC connectivity to temporo‐parietal cortex dissociated semantic and topographic memory.Our findings suggest a division of labour in HC contribution to different types of memory.
Brain and Cognition | 2016
Giovanna Mollo; Theodoros Karapanagiotidis; Boris C. Bernhardt; Charlotte Murphy; Jonathan Smallwood; Elizabeth Jefferies
Highlights • Variations in semantic performance are reflected in resting-state networks.• Inferior frontal connectivity predicts verbal fluency performance.• Connectivity between visual and anterior temporal areas predicts synonym judgement.