Self-similarity and recursion as default modes in human cognition

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Humans generate recursive hierarchies in a variety of domains, including linguistic, social and visuo-spatial modalities. The ability to represent recursive structures has been hypothesized to increase the efficiency of hierarchical processing. Theoretical work together with recent empirical findings suggests that the ability to represent the self-similar structure of hierarchical recursive stimuli may be supported by internal neural representations that compress raw external information and increase efficiency. In order to explicitly test whether the representation of recursive hierarchies depends on internalized rules we compared the processing of visual hierarchies represented either as recursive or non-recursive, using task-free resting-state fMRI data. We aimed to evaluate the relationship between task-evoked functional networks induced by cognitive representations with the corresponding resting-state architecture. We observed increased connectivity within Default Mode Network (DMN) related brain areas during the representation of recursion, while non-recursive representations yielded increased connectivity within the Fronto-Parietal Control-Network. Our results suggest that human hierarchical information processing using recursion is supported by the DMN. In particular, the representation of recursion seems to constitute an internally-biased mode of information-processing that is mediated by both the core and dorsal-medial subsystems of the DMN. Compressed internal rule representations mediated by the DMN may help humans to represent and process hierarchical structures in complex environments by considerably reducing information processing load.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)183-201
Number of pages19
JournalCortex: journal devoted to study of the nervous system and behavior
Volume97
Early online date23 Sept 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2017

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 106018 Human biology

Keywords

  • BRAIN
  • BROCAS AREA
  • CONTROL NETWORK
  • Cognition
  • DEACTIVATION
  • Default-mode
  • FACULTY
  • FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY
  • Hierarchies
  • LANGUAGE
  • MUSIC
  • NEURAL FRAMEWORK
  • REPRESENTATION
  • Recursion
  • fMRI

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