Peak activations within the right cerebellar dentate are shown for encoding and retrieval phases of the Sternberg task (6-target executive versus 6-target match), p < .001. a) The blue vertical lines drawn through the whole brains indicate the location of the cross-sectional slices shown below in part (b). b) The cross-sections correspond to the peak dentate activation in the y-plane for encoding (y = −56) (shown on the left) and retrieval (y = −57) (shown on the right). The position of activation during encoding extends dorsally from the dentate to Lobules IV, V, and VI, and is visible in z-planes −18 to −37. By comparison, the position of activation during retrieval extends ventrally from the dentate to Lobules VIIIB and IX, and is visible in z-planes −36 to −46. As can be seen, there is little spatial overlap between the two activations. A green line has been drawn at z = −37 to mark a functional division between the dorsal and ventral dentate, which divides approximately between z-planes −36 to −40 (Dimitrova, Zeljko et al., 2006). This functional division is consistent with a neuroanatomical pathway division, in which the dorsal dentate projects to motor regions of the frontal lobe, and the ventral dentate projects to cognitive regions of the frontal lobe (Akkal, Dum et al., 2007; Dum and Strick, 2003), implicating a “motor” dorsal dentate and a “cognitive” ventral dentate.