2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.118
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Event-related potential correlates of affective response inhibition in bipolar I disorder: Comparison with schizophrenia

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Cited by 5 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Individuals with BD responded slower on successful Go trials than HC during the affective Go/No-Go task, as expected. As noted in our prior work, individuals with BD showed poorer behavioral discrimination of emotional versus neutral facial expressions (d'), but did not differ from HC on response bias (β) (Menkes et al, 2022). We did not observe relationships between thetaband measures and sensitivity; however, theta activity was significantly correlated with behavioral performance (with both higher power and inter-trial phase consistency corresponding to quicker reaction times on Go trials, and higher power corresponding to a stronger tendency to respond) across participants.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
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“…Individuals with BD responded slower on successful Go trials than HC during the affective Go/No-Go task, as expected. As noted in our prior work, individuals with BD showed poorer behavioral discrimination of emotional versus neutral facial expressions (d'), but did not differ from HC on response bias (β) (Menkes et al, 2022). We did not observe relationships between thetaband measures and sensitivity; however, theta activity was significantly correlated with behavioral performance (with both higher power and inter-trial phase consistency corresponding to quicker reaction times on Go trials, and higher power corresponding to a stronger tendency to respond) across participants.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…It should be noted that ERP analyses published on this dataset (Menkes et al, 2022) did not find significant differences between HC and BD groups on N200 amplitudes-which is thought to also be an electrophysiological index of cognitive control (Folstein and Van Petten, 2008). The current findings of theta activity reductions in BD and their association with task performance suggest that non-phase-locked theta activity contributes to affective response inhibition deficits in BD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 44%
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