Dialogues in Philosophy
Mental and Neuro Sciences

Dialogues in Philosophy, Mental and Neuro Sciences

The official journal of Crossing Dialogues
Volume 7, Issue 2 (December 2014)

ORIGINAL ARTICLES
 

Losing control: the hidden role of motor areas in decision-making

 

Owen P. O’Sullivan

Decision-making has traditionally been viewed as detached from the neural systems of sensory perception and motor function. Consequently, motor areas have played a relatively minor role in discussions surrounding the control processes and neural origins of decision-making.
Empiric evidence, catalysed by technological advances in the past two decades, has proven that motor areas have an integral role in decision-making. They are involved in the generation, modulation, maintenance and execution of decisions and actions. They also take part in a complex hierarchical assessment of multi-modal inputs to ensure that the most appropriate action is generated given the context presented. Clinical conditions such as, alien hand syndrome and utilisation behaviour exemplify the importance of these regulatory controls.
This review charts the trajectory of our understanding of the hidden role of motor areas in decision-making and reflects upon the implications of our deepened understanding. The convergence of evidence from multiple modalities underpinning our current knowledge is discussed and the potential applications thereof considered.

Keywords:
motor cortex, cingulate cortex, decision making, cognitive science, neuroanatomy, alien hand syndrome
 
Dial Phil Ment Neuro Sci 2014; 7(2): 45-49
 
Received on April 14, 2014
Accepted on August 26, 2014
Firstly published online on December 06, 2014