Fig. 4: Non-verbal Swimmy effect involves a bilateral fronto-cerebellar loop during stimulus perception. | Nature Communications

Fig. 4: Non-verbal Swimmy effect involves a bilateral fronto-cerebellar loop during stimulus perception.

From: The Stroop effect involves an excitatory–inhibitory fronto-cerebellar loop

Fig. 4

a Statistical activation maps for signal increase and decrease in the contrast between incongruent and congruent trials in the Swimmy task. The vocal and manual conditions were collapsed. b Statistical maps of brain regions showing differential Swimmy effect activation (a) between the left and right hemispheres. IFJ inferior frontal junction. c Effective connectivity analysis between the lPFC and cerebellar regions based on dynamic causal modeling. The dashed arrows indicate insignificant connectivity. Statistical procedures and formats are similar to those in Fig. 3.

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