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The relationship between childhood stress and distinct stages of dynamic behavior monitoring in adults: neural and behavioral correlates
by
Liu, Yutong
, Wu, Jianhui
, Duan, Hongxia
, Fang, Huihua
, Kohn, Nils
, Qin, Shaozheng
in
Adults
/ Adverse childhood experiences
/ Analysis
/ Behavior
/ Book publishing
/ Child abuse
/ Child abuse & neglect
/ Cognition disorders
/ Error correction & detection
/ Original Manuscript
/ Risk factors
/ Stress in children
2021
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The relationship between childhood stress and distinct stages of dynamic behavior monitoring in adults: neural and behavioral correlates
by
Liu, Yutong
, Wu, Jianhui
, Duan, Hongxia
, Fang, Huihua
, Kohn, Nils
, Qin, Shaozheng
in
Adults
/ Adverse childhood experiences
/ Analysis
/ Behavior
/ Book publishing
/ Child abuse
/ Child abuse & neglect
/ Cognition disorders
/ Error correction & detection
/ Original Manuscript
/ Risk factors
/ Stress in children
2021
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
The relationship between childhood stress and distinct stages of dynamic behavior monitoring in adults: neural and behavioral correlates
by
Liu, Yutong
, Wu, Jianhui
, Duan, Hongxia
, Fang, Huihua
, Kohn, Nils
, Qin, Shaozheng
in
Adults
/ Adverse childhood experiences
/ Analysis
/ Behavior
/ Book publishing
/ Child abuse
/ Child abuse & neglect
/ Cognition disorders
/ Error correction & detection
/ Original Manuscript
/ Risk factors
/ Stress in children
2021
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The relationship between childhood stress and distinct stages of dynamic behavior monitoring in adults: neural and behavioral correlates
Journal Article
The relationship between childhood stress and distinct stages of dynamic behavior monitoring in adults: neural and behavioral correlates
2021
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Overview
Abstract
Childhood adversity is a major risk factor for emotional and cognitive disorders later in adulthood. Behavior monitoring, one of the most important components of cognitive control, plays a crucial role in flexible interaction with the environment. Here, we test a novel conceptual model discriminating between two distinct dimensions of childhood adversity (i.e. deprivation and threat) and examine their relations to dynamic stages of behavior monitoring. Sixty young healthy adults participated in this study using event-related potentials and the dynamic stages of behavior monitoring including response inhibition, error detection and post-error adjustments were investigated in a classical Go/NoGo task. Multiple regression analyses revealed that participants with higher severity of childhood adversity recruited more controlled attention, as indicated by larger (more negative) conflict detection–related NoGo-N2 amplitudes and larger (more negative) error detection–related error-related negativity amplitudes. Higher severity of childhood abuse (an indicator of threat) was related to smaller (less positive) error appraisal–related error positivity amplitudes on the neural level and subsequently lower post-error accuracy on the behavioral level. These results suggested that prefrontal-supported controlled attention is influenced by universal adversity in childhood while the error-related behavioral adjustment is mainly affected by childhood abuse, indicating the dimensions of deprivation and threat are at least partially distinct.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
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