The development and widespread use of functional brain imaging over the past decade has generated a dramatic increase in interest in identifying the neural mechanisms underlying human cognition and behavior. "Executive function" comprises a broad class of mental processes involved in initiating and maintaining smooth information processing and coordinated actions in the central nervous system. They include strategic processes, such as attention allocation and goal representation and maintenance, and evaluative processes, such as on-line performance monitoring; this latter can indicate the degree to which strategic processes need to be engaged to maintain stable performance. One region of the human brain consistently associated with executive function is the anterior cingulate cortex, located on the medial aspect of the frontal cortex adjacent to the corpus callosum. The anterior cingulate cortex has rich bidirectional connections with the frontal, parietal, temporal, and entorhinal association cortexes and the amygdala. Several mechanisms have been proposed to conceptualize how the anterior cingulate cortex exerts its executive function—through motivated attention, attention for action, or error detection. Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) suggests that although the anterior cingulate cortex does indeed show error-related activity, it detects conflicts such as response competition, which in turn may result in errors, rather than detecting errors per se.