RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Dissociation Of Working Memory from Decision Making within the Human Prefrontal Cortex JF The Journal of Neuroscience JO J. Neurosci. FD Society for Neuroscience SP 428 OP 437 DO 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.18-01-00428.1998 VO 18 IS 1 A1 Antoine Bechara A1 Hanna Damasio A1 Daniel Tranel A1 Steven W. Anderson YR 1998 UL http://www.jneurosci.org/content/18/1/428.abstract AB We tested the hypothesis that cognitive functions related to working memory (assessed with delay tasks) are distinct from those related to decision making (assessed with a gambling task), and that working memory and decision making depend in part on separate anatomical substrates. Normal controls (n = 21), subjects with lesions in the ventromedial (VM) (n = 9) or dorsolateral/high mesial (DL/M) prefrontal cortices (n = 10), performed on (1) modified delay tasks that assess working memory and (2) a gambling task designed to measure decision making. VM subjects with more anterior lesions (n = 4) performed defectively on the gambling but not the delay task. VM subjects with more posterior lesions (n = 5) were impaired on both tasks.Right DL/M subjects were impaired on the delay task but not the gambling task. Left DL/M subjects were not impaired on either task. The findings reveal a cognitive and anatomic double dissociation between deficits in decision making (anterior VM) and working memory (right DL/M). This presents the first direct evidence of such effects in humans using the lesion method and underscores the special importance of the VM prefrontal region in decision making, independent of a direct role in working memory.