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Maturation of action monitoring from adolescence to adulthood: an ERP study

Maturation of action monitoring from adolescence to adulthood: an ERP study
Maturation of action monitoring from adolescence to adulthood: an ERP study
This study investigated the development of the frontal lobe action-monitoring system from late childhood and adolescence to early adulthood using ERP markers of error processing. Error negativity (ERN) and correct response negativity (CRN) potentials were recorded while adolescents and adults (aged 12–22 years, n = 23) performed two forced-choice visual reaction time tasks of differing complexity. Significant age differences were seen for behavioural and ERP responses to complex (infrequent, incompatible) trials: adolescents elicited an error negativity of reduced magnitude compared with adults. Furthermore, in contrast to adults, adolescents showed a non-significant differentiation between response-locked ERP components elicited by correct (CRN) and error responses (ERN). Behaviourally, adolescents corrected fewer errors in incompatible trials, and with increasing age there was greater post-error slowing. In conclusion, the neural systems underlying action-monitoring continue to mature throughout the second decade of life, and are associated with increased efficiency for fast error detection and correction during complex tasks.
525-534
Hogan, Alexandra
7e7820da-6e26-49f0-96ce-06638f88dc87
Hogan, Alexandra
7e7820da-6e26-49f0-96ce-06638f88dc87

Hogan, Alexandra (2005) Maturation of action monitoring from adolescence to adulthood: an ERP study. Developmental Science, 8 (6), 525-534. (doi:10.1111/j.1467-7687.2005.00444.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study investigated the development of the frontal lobe action-monitoring system from late childhood and adolescence to early adulthood using ERP markers of error processing. Error negativity (ERN) and correct response negativity (CRN) potentials were recorded while adolescents and adults (aged 12–22 years, n = 23) performed two forced-choice visual reaction time tasks of differing complexity. Significant age differences were seen for behavioural and ERP responses to complex (infrequent, incompatible) trials: adolescents elicited an error negativity of reduced magnitude compared with adults. Furthermore, in contrast to adults, adolescents showed a non-significant differentiation between response-locked ERP components elicited by correct (CRN) and error responses (ERN). Behaviourally, adolescents corrected fewer errors in incompatible trials, and with increasing age there was greater post-error slowing. In conclusion, the neural systems underlying action-monitoring continue to mature throughout the second decade of life, and are associated with increased efficiency for fast error detection and correction during complex tasks.

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Published date: 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 40302
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40302
PURE UUID: 0eab1fdc-00e1-4e0b-ab81-9706f64a0b33

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:18

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Author: Alexandra Hogan

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