Trait and State Anxiety Effects on Mismatch Negativity and Sensory Gating Event-Related Potentials

Author:

Ioakeimidis Vasileios1ORCID,Lennuyeux-Comnene Laura1,Khachatoorian Nareg1,Gaigg Sebastian B.1ORCID,Haenschel Corinna1ORCID,Kyriakopoulos Marinos234ORCID,Dima Danai15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, School of Health and Psychological Sciences, City University of London, 10 Northampton Square, London EC1V 0HB, UK

2. South London and the Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, London SE5 8AF, UK

3. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, London SE5 8AF, UK

4. 1st Department of Psychiatry, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11528 Athens, Greece

5. Department of Neuroimaging, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, London SE5 8AF, UK

Abstract

We used the auditory roving oddball to investigate whether individual differences in self-reported anxiety influence event-related potential (ERP) activity related to sensory gating and mismatch negativity (MMN). The state-trait anxiety inventory (STAI) was used to assess the effects of anxiety on the ERPs for auditory change detection and information filtering in a sample of thirty-six healthy participants. The roving oddball paradigm involves presentation of stimulus trains of auditory tones with certain frequencies followed by trains of tones with different frequencies. Enhanced negative mid-latency response (130–230 ms post-stimulus) was marked at the deviant (first tone) and the standard (six or more repetitions) tone at Fz, indicating successful mismatch negativity (MMN). In turn, the first and second tone in a stimulus train were subject to sensory gating at the Cz electrode site as a response to the second stimulus was suppressed at an earlier latency (40–80 ms). We used partial correlations and analyses of covariance to investigate the influence of state and trait anxiety on these two processes. Higher trait anxiety exhibited enhanced MMN amplitude (more negative) (F(1,33) = 14.259, p = 6.323 × 10−6, ηp2 = 0.302), whereas state anxiety reduced sensory gating (F(1,30) = 13.117, p = 0.001, ηp2 = 0.304). Our findings suggest that high trait-anxious participants demonstrate hypervigilant change detection to deviant tones that appear more salient, whereas increased state anxiety associates with failure to filter out irrelevant stimuli.

Funder

University of London

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

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