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Tracking the implicit self using event-related potentials

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.15795
Publisher DOI
10.3758/s13415-013-0169-3
PubMed ID
23636983
Description
Negative biases in implicit self-evaluation are thought to be detrimental to subjective well-being and have been linked to various psychological disorders, including depression. An understanding of the neural processes underlying implicit self-evaluation in healthy subjects could provide a basis for the investigation of negative biases in depressed patients, the development of differential psychotherapeutic interventions, and the estimation of relapse risk in remitted patients. We thus studied the brain processes linked to implicit self-evaluation in 25 healthy subjects using event-related potential (ERP) recording during a self-relevant Implicit Association Test (sIAT). Consistent with a positive implicit self-evaluation in healthy subjects, they responded significantly faster to the congruent (self-positive mapping) than to the incongruent sIAT condition (self-negative mapping). Our main finding was a topographical ERP difference in a time window between 600 and 700 ms, whereas no significant differences between congruent and incongruent conditions were observed in earlier time windows. This suggests that biases in implicit self-evaluation are reflected only indirectly, in the additional recruitment of control processes needed to override the positive implicit self-evaluation of healthy subjects in the incongruent sIAT condition. Brain activations linked to these control processes can thus serve as an indirect measure for estimating biases in implicit self-evaluation. The sIAT paradigm, combined with ERP, could therefore permit the tracking of the neural processes underlying implicit self-evaluation in depressed patients during psychotherapy.
Date of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
100 - Philosophy::150 - Psychology
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Egenolf, Yvonne
Institut für Psychologie, Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie
Stein, Maria
Universitätsklinik für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie, Psychiatrische Neurophysiologie
König, Thomasorcid-logo
Universitätsklinik und Poliklinik für Psychiatrie, Psychiatrische Neurophysiologie
grosse Holtforth, Martinorcid-logo
Institut für Psychologie, Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie
Dierks, Thomas
Universitätsklinik und Poliklinik für Psychiatrie, Psychiatrische Neurophysiologie
Caspar, Franz Maurus
Institut für Psychologie, Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik und Poliklinik für Psychiatrie, Psychiatrische Neurophysiologie
Institut für Psychologie, Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie
Series
Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
1530-7026
Access(Rights)
open.access
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