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. 2012 Sep 24;6:259. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00259

Table 1.

Representative studies of ERN, N2 and P600.

Author Participants Comorbidity Medication Paradigm Main results Multivariate comparison and/or additional measures?
ERN STUDIES
Gehring et al., 1993 6 HS NR NR FT ERN activity is enhanced when subjects strive for accurate performance but is diminished when subjects aim for response speed instead of accuracy NO
Gehring et al., 2000 9 OCD, 9 controls 7 = MD, PDA, AN, SP, AB. 2 = D, SO. 1 = PD, GA Fluoxetine (2), Clomipramine (1), Sertraline (3) Modified ST Enhanced ERN in OCD patients. Correlates with symptom severity NO
Johannes et al., 2001 10 OCD, 10 controls No history of MD or SP Not pharmacologically treated A reaction time experiment Enhanced ERN in OCD patients P3b
Hajcak and Simons, 2002 18 HOCD, 17 LOCD NR NR Modified ST Enhanced ERN in OCD patients but no differences in performance between groups NO
Hajcak et al., 2005 22 HS (exp.1), 18 HS (exp. 2) NR NR FT with low/high value errors (exp. 1) –and evaluation/control conditions (exp. 2) ERN was significantly larger on high-value trials in both experiments NO
Hajcak et al., 2008 Pre: 18 POCD, 18 controls//Post: 10 POCD, 13 controls NR Clomipramine (2), Sertraline (3), Escitalopram (4), Fluoxetine (1), Bupropion (2), Fluvoxamine (1) Pre and post evaluation after cognitive behavior therapy. Modified simon task ERN was larger in pediatric OCD patients before and after treatment. There was no relationship between ERN and symptom severity NO
Endrass et al., 2008 20 OCD, 20 controls AD (8), GA (5), PD(4) Clomipramine (4), Paroxetine (2), Fluoxetine (1), Fluoxetine plus trimipramine (1), Venlafaxine (2) FT (modified version) OCD patients showed enhanced ERN amplitude on both error and correct trials. CRN amplitude correlates with symptom severity CRN, Pe, behavioral correlations of performance monitoring
Endrass et al., 2010 22 OCD, 22 controls MD (2), GA (2), PD (3) Clomipramine (2), Sertaline (1), Fluoxetine (2), Mirtazapine (1), Fluvoxamine (1) FT (modified version with standard and punishment conditions) In the standard condition OCD patients had significantly larger ERN and CRN amplitudes than controls. No differences were found in the punishment condition. Controls showed an amplitude enhancement between standard and punishment conditions, while OCD patients did not CRN, Pe
Grundler et al., 2009 (Study I) 10 HOCD, 30 LOCD NR NR PRT Higher OCD symptoms predicted smaller ERNs NO
Grundler et al., 2009 (Study II) 14 HOCD, 16 LOCD (PRT)//18 HOCD, 18 LOCD (FT) NR NR PRT, FT High OCD group presented smaller ERN in a probabilistic task and larger ERN in a flanker task NO
Bernstein et al., 1995 30 HS NR NR A four-choice reaction time task ERN was no longer than expected NO
Falkenstein et al., 2000 24 HS NR NR GN, FT ERN had similar amplitude in tasks with a strong response conflict and tasks without any such conflict. ERN activity was found on correct trials Pe
Van Veen and Carter, 2002b 12 HS NR NR FT Reported significant differences between correct and error waveforms indicate that the ERN is significantly more negative than the waveform following correct responses N2, Pe
Holroyd and Coles, 2002: Experiment 1 15 HS NR NR PRT ERN tended to be larger when the feedback stimulus disconfirmed, rather than confirmed, a prediction induced by a previous feedback stimulus Psychophysiological experimentation and computational modeling
Holroyd and Coles, 2002: Experiment 2 15 HS NR NR FT feedback informs the participants their accuracy and average speed ERN amplitude was larger on frequent incompatible error trials than on infrequent compatible and infrequent incompatible error trials Psychophysiological experimentation and computational modeling
Nieuwenhuis et al., 2005 16 OCD, 16 controls NR Paroxetine (5), Clomipramine (1), Citalopram (1), Fluvoxamine (1), Venlafaxine (1), Clonazepam (1) PRT The amplitude of the ERN associated with error and negative feedback was the same for OCD patients and controls NO
Santesso et al., 2006 37 health children NR NR FT Parent-reported obsessive-compulsive behaviors were associated with larger ERN CBCL, Pe
(De Bruijn et al., 2004) 12 HS No neuropsychiatric conditions Medication free FT Amphetamine led to a strong enlargement of ERN amplitudes without affecting reaction times. Lorazepam led to reduced ERN amplitudes D-amphetamine, lorazepam, mirtazapine or placebo was administered in a double-blind, four-way crossover design.
Riba et al., 2005a 15 HS Medical history, laboratory tests, electrocardiogram and urinalysis were normal Medication free FT Yohimbine (adrenoceptor antagonist) led to both an increase in ERN amplitude and a significant reduction in action errors 20 mg of yohimbine and a placebo were administered a double-blind randomized design (DBRD)
Riba et al., 2005b 12 HS Medical history, laboratory tests, electrocardiogram and urinalysis were normal Medication free FT Alprazolam significantly reduced the amplitude of ERN and the number of correct responses and increased reaction time N2, LRPs // Oral doses of 0.25 and 1.0 mg of alprazolam or placebo were administered in a DBRD
Anokhin et al., 2008 Twins: 99 MZ and 175 DZ Medical history was normal Medication free FT Substantial heritability of ERN, CRN and Pe (40–60%), ERP showed significant genetic correlations among them CRN, Pe
Riesel et al., 2011 30 OCD, 30 UFO, 30 HS OCD: MD (4), SO (3), PD (1), GA (1), SP (2), BN (1), PD (3) OCD: Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (7), Tricyclic antidepressants (3) FT Both unaffected first-degree relatives and OCD patients showed increased ERN. ERN did not correlate with symptom severity CRN
Ridderinkhof et al., 2002 14 SD No history of neurological or psychiatric condition Medication free FT The consumption of alcohol in moderate doses reduced participants' task error detection and ERN/N200 amplitudes A double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized cross-over design
Holroyd et al., 1998 15 HS NR NR FT ERN is generated within the ACC NO
Miltner et al., 2003 6 HS NR NR GN, MG Magnetic equivalent of the ERN and dipole source analysis evidenced ACC generators NO
Stemmer et al., 2004 5 LACC, 11 controls NR NR FT Implication of the rostral ACC in ERN generation and also the results show that although subjects can be aware of errors, no ERN is produced NO
N200 AND P600 STUDIES
Ciesielski et al., 2011 9 OCD, 9 controls NR NR ST-WCIT (a high conflict variant) Enhanced N200 amplitude and normal accuracy in OCD patients NO
Kopp et al., 1996b 18 HS NR NR FT The incongruent condition elicited a N200 component synchronized with an erroneous response. N200 amplitude covaried with the magnitude of the erroneous response NO
Liotti et al., 2000 8 HS No history of neurological or psychiatric illness NR ST ST first activates anterior cingulated cortex (350–500 ms post-stimulus) followed by activation of the left temporal-parietal cortex, possibly due to the need for additional processing of word meaning NO
Wang et al., 2000 15 HS No history of neurological or psychiatric illness NR arithmetic problem and answer digit matched task N200 elicited by incongruence among stimuli, while N270 evoked by a physical feature discrimination task and conflict or mental mismatching N270
Yeung et al., 2004 16 HS NR NR FT ERN and N2 shared a very similar scalp topography and neural source ERN
Kopp et al., 1996a 18 HS NR NR Hybrid choice-reaction GN involving selective response priming In no-go trials the N2 amplitude was influenced by selective response priming. The N2 was elicited in both go and no-go trials LRP, P3
Heil et al., 2000 18 HS NR NR GN, FT Target and flankers were assigned to different hands. The flankers primed by one hand were accompanied by a fronto-central amplitude modulation of the N200 LRPs
Eimer, 1993 6 HS NR NR A modified GN No-go stimuli elicited larger N2 components than go stimuli. The N2 enhancement showed a frontal maximum P3s
Beech et al., 1983 8 OCD, 8 controls NR Antidepressant medication was stopped 48 h before testing (3) A task of varying complexity involving shape discrimination Reduced amplitudes and decreased latencies of late EP components (N220 and P350) in OCD patients P3
Towey et al., 1993 17 OCD, 16 HS Absence of major medical problems Drug free for at least 2 weeks before testing Auditory “oddball” stimuli Lager N200 and P3 in OCD patients. Task difficulty increased N200 latencies for controls, but not for OCD patients P300.
Papageorgiou and Rabavilas, 2003 20 OCD, 20 HS Exclusion criteria: MD, GA Drug free for at least 3 weeks for the time of evaluation WST (Computerized version) Enhanced amplitudes of P600 at the right temporoparietal area and prolonged latencies at the right parietal region in OCD patients. Memory performance was also significantly impaired NO

Participants HS, Healthy subjects; OCD, Obsessive-compulsive disorder patients; HOCD, subjects with high OC symptoms (but no OCD patients); LOCD, subjects with low OC symptoms (but no OCD patients); POCD, pediatric OCD; MZ, monozygotic; DZ, dizygotic; UFO, unaffected first degree relatives of OCD; SD, social drinkers (2–3 units per day on average); LACC, lesions in the ACC; FG, patients with lesions outside the frontal cortex; BG, lesions to the basal ganglia; OCT, orthopedic controls.

Comorbidity MD, major depression; PDA, panic disorder with agoraphobia; NA, anorexia nervosa; BN, bulimia nervosa; SP, specific phobia; AB, alcohol abuse; D, dysthymia; SO, social phobia; PD, panic disorder without agoraphobia; GA, generalized anxiety disorder; AD, affective disorder; PD, personality disorder.

Others NR, not reported in the paper; FT, Flanker Task; ST, Stroop Task; PRT, probabilistic reinforcement learning task; GN, Go/No go Task; WST, Wechsler digit span test; MG, magneto encephalography; CRN, correct related negativity; Pe, error positivity; LRPs, lateralized readiness potentials; CBCL, parents report form designed to assess children behaviors.