Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Jun 19.
Published in final edited form as: Psychophysiology. 2012 Jan 3;49(4):510–521. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2011.01332.x

Table 4.

Hierarchical modeling of internalizing problems as a function of mid-frontal (F3/F4) asymmetry, risk status, and life events.

Resting Happy Clip Sad Clip

b p AIC BIC b p AIC BIC b p AIC BIC

MODELS
 Main effects 931.6 946.8 715.9 732.1 707.7 724
  Asymmetry (F3/F4) 6.11 .32 . 9.87 .191 2.80 .981
  Risk status (high-risk) 7.57 .000 6.26 .011 5.82 .018
  Life events 1.05 .000 1.01 .003 1.10 .002
 2-Way interactions 934 954.4 715.8* 736.7 709.0 729.9
  Asymmetry (F3/F4) -3.11 .86 14.88 .358 -18.20 .253
  Risk status (high-risk) 7.21 .000 6.81 .006 5.94 .017
  Life events 1.10 .000 0.90 .009 1.17 .002
  Asymmetry × life events 2.87 .21 -3.25 .081 1.55 .514
  Asymmetry × risk status -11.59 .51 23.67 .151 14.04 .362
 3-Way interactions 933.8* 956.7 715.4* 738.5 709.5 732.6
  Asymmetry (F3/F4) -40.15 .19 -25.49 .409 -52.53 .109
  Risk status (high-risk) 7.04 .000 7.40 .003 6.46 .011
  Life events 1.07 .000 0.89 .009 1.06 .006
  Asymmetry × life events 11.99 .07 5.92 .341 10.37 .170
  Asymmetry × risk status 34.45 .33 71.24 .051 60.51 .135
  Asym x risk × life events -10.39 .14 -9.97 .131 -10.11 .213

All models included baseline alpha asymmetry as control

*

Significant improvement in model fit.