Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
923950 Brain and Cognition 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Invalid irrelevant feedback impaired learning from relevant feedback.•The P300 following relevant feedback was affected by irrelevant feedback validity.•The FRN was unaffected by irrelevant feedback valence.•We conclude that irrelevant feedback affects controlled feedback processing.

For adaptive decision-making it is important to utilize only relevant, valid and to ignore irrelevant feedback. The present study investigated how feedback processing in decision-making is impaired when relevant feedback is combined with irrelevant and potentially invalid feedback. We analyzed two electrophysiological markers of feedback processing, the feedback-related negativity (FRN) and the P300, in a simple decision-making task, in which participants processed feedback stimuli consisting of relevant and irrelevant feedback provided by the color and meaning of a Stroop stimulus. We found that invalid, irrelevant feedback not only impaired learning, it also altered the amplitude of the P300 to relevant feedback, suggesting an interfering effect of irrelevant feedback on the processing of relevant feedback. In contrast, no such effect on the FRN was obtained. These results indicate that detrimental effects of invalid, irrelevant feedback result from failures of controlled feedback processing.

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