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Escalating risk and the moderating effect of resistance to peer influence on the P200 and feedback-related negativity
被引:36
作者:
Kiat, John
[1
]
Straley, Elizabeth
[2
]
Cheadle, Jacob E.
[2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Nebraska, Dept Psychol, 34 Burnett Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA
[2] Univ Nebraska, Dept Sociol, 737 Oldfather Hall, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA
关键词:
peer influence;
risk taking;
Balloon Analogue Risk Task;
EEG;
feedback-related negativity;
GANGLIA DIFFERENTIATES REWARDS;
INDEPENDENT COMPONENT ANALYSIS;
ADOLESCENT BRAIN-DEVELOPMENT;
EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS;
DECISION-MAKING;
TASK BART;
SOURCE LOCALIZATION;
COLLEGE-STUDENTS;
ANTERIOR CINGULATE;
OUTCOME EVALUATION;
D O I:
10.1093/scan/nsv121
中图分类号:
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号:
071006 ;
摘要:
Young people frequently socialize together in contexts that encourage risky decision making, pointing to a need for research into how susceptibility to peer influence is related to individual differences in the neural processing of decisions during sequentially escalating risk. We applied a novel analytic approach to analyze EEG activity from college-going students while they completed the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART), a well-established risk-taking propensity assessment. By modeling outcome-processing-related changes in the P200 and feedback-related negativity (FRN) sequentially within each BART trial as a function of pump order as an index of increasing risk, our results suggest that analyzing the BART in a progressive fashion may provide valuable new insights into the temporal neurophysiological dynamics of risk taking. Our results showed that a P200, localized to the left caudate nucleus, and an FRN, localized to the left dACC, were positively correlated with the level of risk taking and reward. Furthermore, consistent with our hypotheses, the rate of change in the FRN was higher among college students with greater self-reported resistance to peer influence.
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页码:377 / 386
页数:10
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