Error-related brain activity and hierarchical dimensions of
internalizing psychopathology
Abstract
The error-related negativity (ERN) has demonstrated mixed associations
with internalizing psychopathology. An enhanced ERN is associated with
obsessive-compulsive disorder and some anxiety disorders, whereas an
attenuated ERN is associated with depression. This pattern of results
suggests that the ERN may relate to transdiagnostic dimensions within
the internalizing spectrum. The present study examined relationships
between the ERN and internalizing psychopathology at the symptom,
subfactor (i.e., distress, obsessions/compulsions), and spectrum (i.e.,
internalizing) levels. In a sample of 818 adults, higher-order mediation
modeling was used to estimate direct effects of the ERN on each
hierarchical dimension, as well as indirect effects via higher-order
dimensions. At the subfactor level, a larger ERN was directly related to
greater obsessive/compulsive symptoms, while a smaller ERN was directly
related to a greater distress subfactor. None of the self-reported
symptoms were directly related to the ERN, and total effects of the ERN
on dysphoria, insomnia, and ill temper were primarily explained by
higher-order indirect effects via the distress subfactor and
internalizing spectrum. These findings underscore the importance of
understanding the hierarchical nature of the relationship between the
ERN and internalizing psychopathology. These results suggest that many
observed relationships between the ERN and psychopathology symptoms can
be attributed to intermediate subfactor dimensions of internalizing
psychopathology, but discrepant relationships with the ERN exist within
the broader internalizing spectrum.