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Anxiety and expectancy violations: Neural response to false feedback is exaggerated in worriers
Authors:Rebecca J. Compton  Justin Dainer-Best  Stephanie L. Fineman  Gili Freedman  Amelia Mutso  Jesse Rohwer
Affiliation:1. Haverford College , Haverford, PA, USA rcompton@haverford.edu;3. Haverford College , Haverford, PA, USA
Abstract:This study investigated how individual differences in anxiety modulate the neural response to errors and performance feedback. The design included false feedback on some trials in order to test the hypothesis that anxious people show stronger neural reactions to feedback that is worse than expected. Participants completed a trial-and-error learning task that required learning the correct key to press in response to face images. EEG was recorded during the task, and the response-locked error-related negativity (ERN) and feedback-locked ERN were computed to measure neural responses to error commission and feedback. As expected, errors produced a response-locked ERN and false feedback produced a feedback-locked ERN in the group as a whole. High levels of trait worry predicted a disproportionately larger ERN following false feedback, but did not predict the magnitude of the response-locked ERN following errors. These results imply that worry-prone people react more strongly to violations of expectations, rather than to errors themselves.
Keywords:Anxiety  Feedback  Expectancy  Error  ERN
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