Methodological issues in the use of individual brain measures to index trait liabilities: The example of noise-probe P3

Recent research initiatives have called for an increased use of biological concepts and measures in defining and studying mental health problems, but important measurement-related challenges confront efforts in this direction. This article highlights some of these challenges with reference to an int...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of psychophysiology 2017-01, Vol.111, p.145-155
Hauptverfasser: Perkins, Emily R., Yancey, James R., Drislane, Laura E., Venables, Noah C., Balsis, Steve, Patrick, Christopher J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent research initiatives have called for an increased use of biological concepts and measures in defining and studying mental health problems, but important measurement-related challenges confront efforts in this direction. This article highlights some of these challenges with reference to an intriguing measure of neural reactivity: the probe P3 response, a mid-latency brain potential evoked by an intense, unexpected acoustic-probe stimulus. Using data for a large adult sample (N=418), we report evidence that amplitude of probe P3 response to unwarned noise bursts occurring in a picture-viewing task exhibits robust, independent associations with two distinct trait constructs: weak inhibitory control (or disinhibition; DIS) and threat sensitivity (THT). Additionally, we report a selective association for THT with attentional suppression of probe P3 response during viewing of aversive pictures compared to neutral. These results point to separable elements of variance underlying the probe P3 response, including one element reflecting DIS-related variations in cognitive-elaborative processing, and others reflecting THT-related variations in aversive foreground engagement and abrupt defensive reorientation. Key measurement issues are considered in relation to these specific findings, and methodological and statistical approaches for addressing these issues are discussed in relation to advancement of a quantitatively sound, biologically informed science of psychopathology. •Probe P3 ERP response relates to multiple clinically relevant psychological traits.•Findings discourage use of biomarkers as proxies for self-report variables.•Measurement issues must be considered in biological research on mental health.
ISSN:0167-8760
1872-7697
DOI:10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2016.11.012