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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jun 30.
Published in final edited form as: CNS Spectr. 2015 Aug;20(4):346–354. doi: 10.1017/S1092852915000036

TABLE 1.

Error-related negativity (ERN) and pediatric obsessive compulsive and anxiety disorders: a summary of the published literature

Study Age (yrs) Patient type Design Paradigm Main results
Anxiety Disorders
Ladouceur et al., 200619 8–14 AD Group comparison:
AD (n = 12) v HC (n = 13)
Flanker (arrow) Increased ERN in AD compared to HC.
Carrasco et al., 201311,a 8–16 AD, OCD Group comparison:
AD (n = 13) v OCD (n = 26) v HC (n = 27)
Flanker (arrow) Increased ERN in both AD and OCD groups compared to HC.
Meyer et al., 201320,b 5–7 AD Group comparison:
AD (n = 48) v HC (n = 48)
Go/NoGo Increased ERN in AD compared to HC at young age (~6 years)
Santesso et al., 200670 10 +/− .25 OCS, AS* Correlational:
ERN α OCS, AS
Flanker (letter) Greater ERN correlates with higher OCS. No significant relationship of ERN with AS.
OCD
Hajcak et al., 20089 8–17 OCD Before CBT/After CBT:
OCD (n = 18/10) v HC (n = 18/13)
Simon Increased ERN in OCD compared to HC before and after CBT, despite symptom reduction, suggests increased ERN is trait (not state) marker of OCD
Hanna et al., 201210,a 10–19 OCD +/− tics Group comparison:
OCD (n = 44) v OCD + tic (n = 9) v HC (n = 44)
Increased ERN in non-tic related OCD compared to both tic-related OCD and HC, suggests OCD with and without tics are neurobiologically different subtypes.
Carrasco et al., 201311,a 10–17 OCD, unaffected sibs Group comparison:
OCD (n = 40) v US (n = 19) v HC (n = 40)
Increased ERN in both OCD and US groups compared to HC, suggesting ERN as biomarker for genetic risk of OCD.
Community Samples
Torpey et al., 201371,b 5–7 n/a Correlational:
ERN α behavioral fear at 3 yrs (n = 328)
Go/NoGo Greater ERN at ~6 years correlates with lower behavioral fear at ~3 years.
Meyer et al., 201218,c 8–13 n/a Correlational:
ERN α SCARED (n = 55)
Flanker (arrow) Greater ERN correlates with lower anxiety at 8–10 years, but higher anxiety at 11–13 years.
Bress et al., 201572,c 11–13 n/a Correlational:
ERN α SCARED & CDI (n = 25)
Flanker (arrow) Greater ERN correlates with higher anxiety; contrasted with inverse relationship of depressive symptoms with feedback related negativity, a neurophysiological marker of reward
McDermott et al., 200913 14–16 n/a Longitudinal:
BI, ERN as predictors later anxiety (n = 82)
Flanker (letter) Greater ERN in at adolescence (14–16 yrs) moderates relationship of early inhibited temperament (2–3 yrs) with anxiety disorder in adolescence (14–16 yrs)
Lahat et al., 201412 7.7 +/− .25 n/a Longitudinal:
BI, ERN as predictors later anxiety (n = 113)
Flanker (fish) Greater ERN at ~7 years moderates relationship of early inhibited temperament (2–3 yrs) with social phobia symptoms at 9 years.

Anxiety disorder (AD) samples included generalized anxiety disorder, separation anxiety disorder, social phobia, and specific phobia. There were no obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) diagnoses in any AD sample, except for the study by Meyer et al,20 in which 2 of 48 AD patients had comorbid OCD (with other ADs). HC = healthy control; ERN = error-related negativity; CBT = cognitive behavior therapy; US = unaffected siblings; SCARED = Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders; CDI = Child Depression Inventory; BI = behavioral inhibition.

*

OCS = obsessive compulsive symptoms in a community (ie, nonclinical) ranged from none to subclinical based on parent report on the obsessive-compulsive subscale of the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) (Achenbach, 1991). Non-OCD anxiety symptoms (AS) were also examined in the same sample using the CBCL.

a,b,c

Partial subject overlap across studies.