Doing it Wrong: A Systematic Review on Electrocortical and Behavioral Correlates of Error Monitoring in Patients with Neurological Disorders
•This is a systematic review on error processing alterations in neurological diseases.•The Error-Related Negativity (ERN) and Theta power are altered in many neurological disorders.•The Positivity Error (Pe) is preserved in most of the neurological disorders.•There are less consistent findings on po...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neuroscience 2022-03, Vol.486, p.103-125 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •This is a systematic review on error processing alterations in neurological diseases.•The Error-Related Negativity (ERN) and Theta power are altered in many neurological disorders.•The Positivity Error (Pe) is preserved in most of the neurological disorders.•There are less consistent findings on post-error slowing and other error potentials.
Detecting errors in one’s own and other’s actions is a crucial ability for learning and adapting behavior to everchanging, highly volatile environments. Studies in healthy people demonstrate that monitoring errors in one’s own and others’ actions are underpinned by specific neural systems that are dysfunctional in a variety of neurological disorders. In this review, we first briefly discuss the main findings concerning error detection and error awareness in healthy subjects, the current theoretical models, and the tasks usually applied to investigate these processes. Then, we report a systematic search for evidence of dysfunctional error monitoring among neurological populations (basal ganglia, neurodegenerative, white-matter diseases and acquired brain injury). In particular, we examine electrophysiological and behavioral evidence for specific alterations of error processing in neurological disorders. Error-related negativity (ERN) amplitude were reduced in most (although not all) neurological patient groups, whereas Positivity Error (Pe) amplitude appeared not to be affected in most patient groups. Also theta activity was reduced in some neurological groups, but consistent evidence on the oscillatory activity has not been provided thus far. Behaviorally, we did not observe relevant patterns of pronounced dysfunctional (post-) error processing. Finally, we discuss limitations of the existing literature, conclusive points, open questions and new possible methodological approaches for clinical studies. |
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ISSN: | 0306-4522 1873-7544 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.01.027 |