[4] Neuroimaging studies employing various cognitive tasks have shown that the right VLPFC region is a critical substrate of control.
[5] Alternatively, Corbetta and Shulman[2][6][7] have advanced the hypothesis that there are two distinct frontoparietal networks involved in spatial attention, with the right VLPFC being a component of a right-lateralized ventral attention network that governs reflexive reorienting.
From this perspective, the right lateral PFC, along with a region spanning the right temporoparietal junction (TPJ) and the inferior parietal lobule, are engaged when abrupt onsets occur in the environment, suggesting that these regions are involved in re-orienting attention to perceptual events that occur outside the current focus of attention.
[4] Also, the VLPFC is the end point of the ventral pathway (stream) that brings information about the stimuli's characteristics.
The right middle VLPFC (BA 45) responds to decision uncertainty (presumably in right-handed individuals).