| Literature DB >> 31760856 |
Tianyuan Ke1,2, Jia Wu1, Cynthia J Willner3, Zachariah Brown4, Barbara Banz3, Stefon Van Noordt1, Allison C Waters5, Michael J Crowley1.
Abstract
Substantial changes in cognitive-affective self-referential processing occur during adolescence. We studied the behavioral and ERP correlates of self-evaluation in healthy male and female adolescents aged 12-17 (N = 109). Participants completed assessments of depression symptoms and puberty as well as a self-referential encoding task while 128-channel high-density EEG data were collected. Depression symptom severity was associated with increased endorsement of negative words and longer reaction times. In an extreme group analysis, a negative appraisal-bias subsample (n = 28) displayed decreased frontal P2 amplitudes to both positive and negative word stimuli, reflecting reduced early attentional processing and emotional salience. Compared to the positive appraisal-bias subsample (n = 27), the negative appraisal-bias subsample showed reduced LPP to positive words but not negative words, suggesting attenuated sustained processing of positive self-relevant stimuli. Findings are discussed in terms of neural processes associated with ERPs during negative versus positive self-appraisal bias, and developmental implications.Entities:
Keywords: Self-referential processing; adolescence; depression; event-related potential; negative appraisal
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31760856 DOI: 10.1080/17470919.2019.1697744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Neurosci ISSN: 1747-0919 Impact factor: 2.083