4.6 Review

Feedback processing in cognitive and motor tasks: A meta-analysis on the feedback-related negativity

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14439

Keywords

ACC; ERPs; error processing; motor learning; reinforcement learning; reward positivity

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This study highlights the significance of feedback processing in motor learning and compares it to the cognitive domain. The findings indicate that the FRN amplitude is higher and the latency is shorter in motor tasks, possibly due to higher task complexity and feedback ambiguity.
For motor learning, the processing of behavioral outcomes is of high significance. The feedback-related negativity (FRN) is an event-related potential, which is often described as a correlate of the reward prediction error in reinforcement learning. The number of studies examining the FRN in motor tasks is increasing. This meta-analysis summarizes the component in the motor domain and compares it to the cognitive domain. Therefore, a data set of a previous meta-analysis in the cognitive domain that comprised 47 studies was reanalyzed and compared to additional 25 studies of the motor domain. Further, a moderator analysis for the studies in the motor domain was conducted. The FRN amplitude was higher in the motor domain than in the cognitive domain. This might be related to a higher task complexity and a higher feedback ambiguity of motor tasks. The FRN latency was shorter in the motor domain than in the cognitive domain. Given that sensory information can be used as an external feedback predictor prior to the presentation of the final feedback, reward processing in the motor domain may have been faster and reduced the FRN latency. The moderator variable analysis revealed that the feedback modality influenced the FRN latency, with shorter FRN latencies after bimodal than after visual feedback. Processing of outcome feedback seems to share basic principles in both domains; however, differences exist and should be considered in FRN studies. Future research is motivated to scrutinize the effects of bimodal feedback and other moderators within the motor domain. This meta-analysis highlights the special role of feedback processing in motor learning. It indicates that the feedback-related negativity (FRN), which is a prominent neural correlate of reinforcement learning, has a higher amplitude and a shorter latency in motor tasks than in cognitive tasks.

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