Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7278619 | Biological Psychology | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Impaired error awareness is related to poorer outcome following traumatic brain injury (TBI). Error awareness deficits are also found in major depressive disorder (MDD), but have not been examined in the MDD that follows a TBI (TBI-MDD). This study assessed neural activity related to error awareness in TBI-MDD. Four groups completed a response inhibition task while EEG was recorded- healthy controls (NÂ =Â 15), MDD-only (NÂ =Â 15), TBI-only (NÂ =Â 16), and TBI-MDD (NÂ =Â 12). Error related EEG activity was compared using powerful randomisation statistics that included all electrodes and time points. Participants with TBI-MDD displayed less frontally distributed neural activity, suggesting reduced contribution from frontal generating sources. Neural activity during this time window is thought to reflect conscious awareness of errors. The TBI-only and MDD-only groups did not differ from controls, and early error processing was unaffected, suggesting early error detection is intact.
Keywords
GCsWTARTBITCTBDI-IIMADRSACCERNGFPMDDPTADLPFCTraumatic brain injuryTraumatic brain injury (TBI)Post-traumatic amnesiaMajor depressive disorderMajor depressive disorder (MDD)Loss of consciousnesserror positivityError positivity (Pe)Error related negativityanterior cingulate cortexdorsolateral prefrontal cortexLocMontgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating ScaleGlasgow coma scaleElectroencephalography (EEG)Beck Depression Inventory II
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Authors
N.W. Bailey, K.E. Hoy, J.J. Maller, D.J. Upton, R.A. Segrave, B.M. Fitzgibbon, P.B. Fitzgerald,