Exploring the role of post-error processing in social anxiety across age

IF 7 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-03-10 DOI:10.1111/jcpp.14146
Olivia A. Stibolt, Fabian A. Soto, Jeremy W. Pettit, Yasmin Rey, George A. Buzzell
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Abstract

Background

Error monitoring, a neurocognitive process reflecting self-detection of errors, has been proposed as a marker of social anxiety. However, the way in which this marker relates to social anxiety is not consistent across age, as older children and adolescents with anxiety exhibit heightened error monitoring and younger children with anxiety exhibit diminished error monitoring. One way to contextualize this inconsistency and provide insight into childhood social anxiety is to examine the less-studied consequences of error monitoring, termed post-error processing.

Methods

We employed computational modeling to estimate a form of post-error processing (attentional focusing) during a flanker task, within a cross-sectional sample of 148 treatment-seeking youth aged 7–17. Youth reported social anxiety symptoms via the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders (SCARED).

Results

Mixed-effects regression analyses revealed a three-way interaction (p = .034) between trial type (post-error/correct), age, and social anxiety symptoms predicting attentional focusing. Higher social anxiety predicted diminished post-error attentional focusing in children, but this effect changed across age, with higher social anxiety no longer predicting diminished post-error attentional focusing by adolescence.

Conclusions

Studying the functional consequences of committing errors (post-error processing) provides additional context for understanding the relationship between social anxiety and error monitoring. These data elucidate important changes in the relationship between social anxiety and post-error processing across age and could therefore inform developmentally sensitive treatments of pediatric social anxiety.

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探究错误后加工在不同年龄社交焦虑中的作用。
背景:错误监测是一种反映错误自我检测的神经认知过程,已被提出作为社交焦虑的标志。然而,这一标记与社交焦虑的关系在不同年龄阶段并不一致,因为年龄较大的焦虑儿童和青少年表现出更高的错误监测,而年龄较小的焦虑儿童表现出更低的错误监测。一种将这种不一致置于背景下并深入了解儿童社交焦虑的方法是检查错误监测的研究较少的后果,称为错误后处理。方法:在148名7-17岁寻求治疗的青少年的横截面样本中,我们采用计算模型来估计侧翼任务期间的一种错误后处理形式(注意聚焦)。青少年通过儿童焦虑相关障碍筛查报告社交焦虑症状。结果:混合效应回归分析显示,试验类型(错误后/纠正)、年龄和预测注意力集中的社交焦虑症状之间存在三方交互作用(p = 0.034)。较高的社交焦虑预示着儿童犯错后注意力的减少,但这种影响随着年龄的变化而变化,较高的社交焦虑不再预示着青少年犯错后注意力的减少。结论:研究犯错的功能后果(错误后处理)为理解社交焦虑和错误监测之间的关系提供了额外的背景。这些数据阐明了社交焦虑与错误后处理之间关系的重要变化,因此可以为儿童社交焦虑的发育敏感治疗提供信息。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
5.30%
发文量
169
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry (JCPP) is a highly regarded international publication that focuses on the fields of child and adolescent psychology and psychiatry. It is recognized for publishing top-tier, clinically relevant research across various disciplines related to these areas. JCPP has a broad global readership and covers a diverse range of topics, including: Epidemiology: Studies on the prevalence and distribution of mental health issues in children and adolescents. Diagnosis: Research on the identification and classification of childhood disorders. Treatments: Psychotherapeutic and psychopharmacological interventions for child and adolescent mental health. Behavior and Cognition: Studies on the behavioral and cognitive aspects of childhood disorders. Neuroscience and Neurobiology: Research on the neural and biological underpinnings of child mental health. Genetics: Genetic factors contributing to the development of childhood disorders. JCPP serves as a platform for integrating empirical research, clinical studies, and high-quality reviews from diverse perspectives, theoretical viewpoints, and disciplines. This interdisciplinary approach is a key feature of the journal, as it fosters a comprehensive understanding of child and adolescent mental health. The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry is published 12 times a year and is affiliated with the Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health (ACAMH), which supports the journal's mission to advance knowledge and practice in the field of child and adolescent mental health.
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