2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinph.2016.07.009
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The bimodal P300 oddball component is decreased in patients with an adjustment disorder: An event-related potentials study

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Further studies identified younger age, worse preceding mental health, higher alexithymia, neuroticism, psychoticism, harm avoidance, and lower self-transcendence as predictors of AjD in military recruits (Chen, Chen, Chen, & Lung, 2011; Lung, Lee, & Shu, 2006; Na et al, 2012). Focusing on neurobiology, studies found decreased grey matter volume (Myung et al, 2016) and an increased sensitivity of the bimodal P300 amplitude (Kajosch et al, 2016) in patients diagnosed with AjD. Furthermore, various studies found interpersonal variables predicting AjD, e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further studies identified younger age, worse preceding mental health, higher alexithymia, neuroticism, psychoticism, harm avoidance, and lower self-transcendence as predictors of AjD in military recruits (Chen, Chen, Chen, & Lung, 2011; Lung, Lee, & Shu, 2006; Na et al, 2012). Focusing on neurobiology, studies found decreased grey matter volume (Myung et al, 2016) and an increased sensitivity of the bimodal P300 amplitude (Kajosch et al, 2016) in patients diagnosed with AjD. Furthermore, various studies found interpersonal variables predicting AjD, e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This was a preliminary exploratory study that provided an opportunity to understand the underlying neural mechanism of the crossmodal emotional disorder of MADs. More importantly, previous studies suggested that the crossmodal emotional integration disorder not only effectively predicted or evaluated the early stage of the development of substance addiction (Lannoy et al, 2017) but also improved the sensitivity of clinical diagnosis (Kajosch et al, 2016;Nan et al, 2018), which could be beneficial for explaining the relationship between crossmodal emotional dysfunction and clinical disease (Brandwein et al, 2015). This study offered a new suggestion for preventing and improving the emotional cognitive impairment of substance addictions as well as clinical interventions and treatment (Tinga et al, 2016;Nattala et al, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…It is nowadays well-accepted that transdiagnostic impairment of cognitive control[ 83 ], self-referential processes[ 112 ], working memory[ 113 ], decision making[ 114 ], and attention[ 115 ] largely contribute to the real-world socio-occupational impairment common across disorders. Therefore, I am inclined to suggest that such a cognitive ERP-battery should at least include two active and two passive tasks: (1) A Go/No-go task, which appears to be the best-suited task to assess cognitive control[ 143 ], and to record the No-go N2, the No-go P3, and the ERN as the main ERPs of interest; (2) A bimodal (visual-auditory) three-stimulus oddball task, in order to probe for updating memory and decision-making processes through the recording of P3a and P3b components[ 87 , 140 ]; (3) A passive auditory paired-stimulus paradigm, classically used to record sensory gating through the P50[ 149 ]; and (4) A passive auditory oddball design in order to access the MMN component[ 150 ]. Monitoring the changes in these components in a single patient during treatment would be of the greatest clinical interest for identifying neural changes that are positive predictors of the clinical trajectory as well as cognitive functions that still warrant being trained.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, it was found for instance that performing a secondary dual-task resulted in a reduced ERN, and this reduction was larger in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder than in the group of healthy participants[ 134 ], as well as a single session of attention bias modification[ 135 ] or expressive writing[ 136 ], thus suggesting that increased ERNs in clinical anxiety disorders can be normalized, at least temporarily[ 137 ]. Increased sensitivity of the P3a and the P3b amplitudes to depression severity are also now observable thanks to the development of adapted new ERP protocols, such as the three-stimulus oddball design[ 138 , 139 ] and bimodal oddball protocols[ 140 , 141 ], respectively. Research assessing the efficiency of a procedure or a treatment to impact an ERP of interest, even in healthy participants, will, therefore, remain of fundamental relevance in the ERP research area.…”
Section: Using Erps In Psychiatry: What Perspectives?mentioning
confidence: 99%