Effects of anxiety state on N400 event-related brain potential response to unexpected semantic stimuli.

Neurosci Lett

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Emotional states, particularly anxiety, can affect how people predict upcoming information based on context.
  • The study measured participants' brain responses (N400 ERP) to category definitions and target words after inducing anxiety or using a control method.
  • Results showed that anxiety led to greater brain responses for unexpected items, indicating more cognitive effort was needed to process these surprises, rather than enhancing recognition of expected items.

Article Abstract

Emotional states can influence how people use meaningful context to make predictions about what comes next. To measure whether state anxiety influences such prediction, we used the N400 event-related brain potential (ERP) response to semantic stimuli, whose amplitude is smaller (less negative) when the stimulus is more predicted based on preceding context. Participants (n = 28) were randomized to one of two groups, who underwent either an "anxious-uncertainty" procedure previously shown to increase anxiety, or a control procedure. Both before and after this procedure, participants' ERPs were recorded while they viewed category definitions (e.g., "a type of fruit"), each followed by a target word that was either a high-typicality category exemplar ("apple"), low-typicality exemplar ("cherry"), or non-exemplar ("clamp") of the category. Participants' task was to respond by pressing one of two buttons to indicate whether the target represented a member of the category. As expected, based on previous work, overall, N400 amplitudes were largest (most negative) in response to non-exemplars, intermediate to low-typicality exemplars, and smallest to high-typicality exemplars. N400 amplitudes were larger to non-exemplars after the anxious-uncertainty procedure than after the control procedure. N400 amplitudes to both types of exemplars did not differ after the anxious-uncertainty procedure versus the control procedure. The results are consistent with participants devoting more neural resources to processing contextually unexpected items under anxious states, rather than anxiety facilitating processing of expected items.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2024.137713DOI Listing

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