2020
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci10090598
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A Time Series-Based Point Estimation of Stop Signal Reaction Times: More Evidence on the Role of Reactive Inhibition-Proactive Inhibition Interplay on the SSRT Estimations

Abstract: The Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT) is a latency measurement for the unobservable human brain stopping process, and was formulated by Logan (1994) without consideration of the nature (go/stop) of trials that precede the stop trials. Two asymptotically equivalent and larger indices of mixture SSRT and weighted SSRT were proposed in 2017 to address this issue from time in task longitudinal perspective, but estimation based on the time series perspective has still been missing in the literature. A time series-ba… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(68 reference statements)
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“…Inhibitory control can also be conceptualized as reactive or proactive [ 17 , 20 ]. Proactive inhibition refers to how knowing that there may be an upcoming response that should be cancelled affects performance in the task.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inhibitory control can also be conceptualized as reactive or proactive [ 17 , 20 ]. Proactive inhibition refers to how knowing that there may be an upcoming response that should be cancelled affects performance in the task.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are only two studies in the SST literature that partially answered this question when SSRT is considered as constant index [14,15]. Here, it was shown when considering SST data in a longitudinal context SSRT c…”
Section: Constant Indexmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Within each context, these methods mentioned below refined the earlier proposed methods given their associated contexts (see Figure 2). Referring to Figure 2 (path 1-1,1-2), there are four estimation methods of SSRT as a constant index: the mean crude method, the Logan 1994 integration method [3], the time series based state-space method [14] (path 1-1), and the weighted method and its mixture equivalent [15] (path 1-2) . Given a subject with go reaction time (GORT) random variable in the go trials with quantile function Q GORT , n stop signal delays T d , and the probability of successful inhibition(SI) denoted by P(SI|T d ).…”
Section: Estimation Methods: Context and Componentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The relationship between age-related changes in hippocampal volume and activities remains to be investigated. Fourth, besides the sequential effect, proactive inhibition can also be quantified as a frequentist measure [ 87 ]. As shown in our earlier work, this and the Bayesian measure were highly correlated [ 88 ] and demonstrated similar age-related changes ( Figure A2 ).…”
Section: Limitations Other Considerations and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hippocampus Overall model −3.6526 0.0004 −16.594 4 145 0.0090 0.0574 SEQ −1.5427 0.1251 −16.534 Age 3.0107 0.0031 0.3475 Sex −0.4914 0.6239 −1.3584
Figure A1 Frequency distribution of age and its break-down by sex.
Figure A2 Correlation between ( a ) age and proactive control represented by the sequential effect quantified as the correlation between the estimated probability of stop signal and go reaction time (goRT) (a reproduction of Figure 1 a in Hu et al [ 45 ]); ( b ) age and proactive control represented by the delta goRT quantified as the difference between goRT of go trials following stop trials and those of go trials following go trials described in Soltanifar et al [ 87 ]; and ( c ) the two proactive control indices.
…”
Section: Table A1mentioning
confidence: 99%