焦虑症儿童的平衡 N1 较大,与错误相关的负性有关

IF 4 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Aiden M. Payne , Norman B. Schmidt , Alex Meyer , Greg Hajcak
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景错误相关负性(error-related negativity,ERN)是由认知任务中的错误所诱发的一种大脑反应,这种反应会随着焦虑而增强,并能预测儿童和青少年随后焦虑的发生或加重。对站立平衡的物理干扰会诱发一种称为平衡 N1 的大脑反应,这种反应在头皮地形图和对各种调节因素的反应方面与 ERN 相似。在本研究中,我们测试了焦虑对患有和未患有焦虑症的儿童(9-12 岁)平衡 N1 的影响(38 名患有广泛性焦虑症、社交焦虑症和/或强迫症的儿童和 50 名未患有这些疾病的儿童)。我们测量了从前倾姿势突然松开支撑时的平衡N1、在 "去/不去 "任务中出现错误时的ERN,以及使用儿童焦虑和相关情绪障碍筛查的儿童和家长报告表测量的焦虑症状。结论 与 ERN 相比,平衡 N1 的测量可靠性更高,而且对错误的实验控制更强,这表明平衡范式可能为研究与焦虑有关的错误相关大脑活动的个体差异提供了一种更有效的方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Balance N1 Is Larger in Children With Anxiety and Associated With the Error-Related Negativity

Background

The error-related negativity (ERN) is a brain response evoked by mistakes in cognitive tasks that is enhanced with anxiety and can predict the subsequent onset or exacerbation of anxiety in children and adolescents. A physical disturbance to standing balance evokes a brain response called the balance N1 that resembles the ERN in scalp topography and in response to a variety of moderating factors. We recently found that the balance N1 and ERN correlate in amplitude across small samples of adults.

Methods

In the current study, we tested the effect of anxiety on the balance N1 in children (ages 9–12 years) with and without diagnosed anxiety disorders (38 children with generalized anxiety, social anxiety, and/or obsessive-compulsive disorder and 50 children without these disorders). We measured the balance N1 in response to sudden release of support from a forward leaning posture, the ERN in response to mistakes on a Go/NoGo task, and anxiety symptoms using child- and parent-report forms of the Screen for Child Anxiety and Related Emotional Disorders.

Results

Both the balance N1 and the ERN were larger in the anxious group. The balance N1 was also associated with both the ERN and parent report of child anxiety symptom severity across individuals.

Conclusions

The higher measurement reliability of the balance N1 than the ERN and greater experimental control over errors suggest that balance paradigms may provide a more powerful method for investigating individual differences in error-related brain activity related to anxiety.
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来源期刊
Biological psychiatry global open science
Biological psychiatry global open science Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
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