4.7 Article

Subthreshold muscle twitches dissociate oscillatory neural signatures of conflicts from errors

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 86, Issue -, Pages 503-513

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.10.033

Keywords

Medial frontal cortex; Theta; Partial errors; Oscillations; Cognitive control; Errors; EEG; Connectivity; Time-frequency

Funding

  1. VIDI award from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  2. NWO

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We investigated the neural systems underlying conflict detection and error monitoring during rapid online error correction/monitoring mechanisms. We combined data from four separate cognitive tasks and 64 subjects in which EEG and EMG (muscle activity from the thumb used to respond) were recorded. In typical neuroscience experiments, behavioral responses are classified as error or correct; however, closer inspection of our data revealed that correct responses were often accompanied by partial errors a muscle twitch of the incorrect hand (mixed correct trials,similar to 13% of the trials). We found that these muscle twitches dissociated conflicts from errors in time-frequency domain analyses of EEG data. In particular, both mixed-correct trials and full error trials were associated with enhanced theta-band power (4-9 Hz) compared to correct trials. However, full errors were additionally associated with power and frontal-parietal synchrony in the delta band. Single-trial robust multiple regression analyses revealed a significant modulation of theta power as a function of partial error correction time, thus linking trial-to-trial fluctuations in power to conflict. Furthermore, single-trial correlation analyses revealed a qualitative dissociation between conflict and error processing, such that mixed correct trials were associated with positive theta-RT correlations whereas full error trials were associated with negative delta-RT correlations. These findings shed new light on the local and global network mechanisms of conflict monitoring and error detection, and their relationship to online action adjustment. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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