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Theta lingua franca: A common mid-frontal substrate for action monitoring processes

Cavanagh, James F. ; Zambrano-Vazquez, Laura ; Allen, John J. B.

Psychophysiology, 2012-02, Vol.49 (2), p.220-238 [Periódico revisado por pares]

United States: Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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  • Título:
    Theta lingua franca: A common mid-frontal substrate for action monitoring processes
  • Autor: Cavanagh, James F. ; Zambrano-Vazquez, Laura ; Allen, John J. B.
  • Assuntos: Adolescent ; Anterior cingulate ; Brain ; Conflict ; Cortex (prefrontal) ; Electroencephalography ; ERN ; Event-related potentials ; Evoked Potentials - physiology ; Female ; FRN ; Frontal Lobe - physiology ; Humans ; Male ; Mismatch negativity ; Novelty ; Physiological psychology ; Probability Learning ; Psychomotor Performance - physiology ; Punishment ; Reaction Time - physiology ; Reinforcement (Psychology) ; Reinforcement learning ; Theta ; Theta Rhythm - physiology ; Young Adult
  • É parte de: Psychophysiology, 2012-02, Vol.49 (2), p.220-238
  • Notas: Table S1: Paired t test data from FigureTable S2: Factor analysis results of raw EEG dataFigure S1: Broadband (0.05-15 Hz) ERPs at the FCz electrode, overlapped within each condition.Figure S2: Delta band (1-4 Hz) ERPs at the FCz electrode.Figure S3: Alpha band (1-4 Hz) ERPs at the FCz electrode.Figure S4: Beta band (1-4 Hz) ERPs at the FCz electrode.Figure S5: Stimulus-locked topoplots as shown in Figure of the main text (average reference), with additional artifact rejection (±100 μV at FP1) or with an alternative reference scheme (linked mastoids). These plots demonstrate that frontal and occipital theta power seen in the topoplots are a feature of the averaged reference and are not due to artifact contamination.Figure S6: Response-locked topoplots as shown in Figure with variants as above.Figure S7: Stimulus-locked topoplots as shown in Figure with variants as above.Figure S8: Response-locked topoplots as shown in Figure  with variants as above.
    istex:D26F95D1BE6F8B266E9288E22B70F7192C720D17
    ArticleID:PSYP1293
    National Institute of Mental Health - No. F31MH082560; No. R01MH066902
    ark:/67375/WNG-QBL257Q3-W
    ObjectType-Article-1
    SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
    ObjectType-Feature-2
    ObjectType-Article-2
    ObjectType-Feature-1
    content type line 23
  • Descrição: We present evidence that a multitude of mid‐frontal event‐related potential (ERP) components partially reflect a common theta band oscillatory process. Specifically, mid‐frontal ERP components in the N2 time range and error‐related negativity time range are parsimoniously characterized as reflections of theta band activities. Forty participants completed three different tasks with varying stimulus–response demands. Permutation tests were used to identify the dominant time–frequency responses of stimulus‐ and response‐locked conditions as well as the enhanced responses to novelty, conflict, punishment, and error. A dominant theta band feature was found in all conditions, and both ERP component amplitudes and theta power measures were similarly modulated by novelty, conflict, punishment, and error. The findings support the hypothesis that generic and reactive medial prefrontal cortex processes are parsimoniously reflected by theta band activities.
  • Editor: United States: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
  • Idioma: Inglês

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