A recent study has proposed that posterior regions of the medial frontal cortex (pMFC) learn to predict the likelihood of errors occurring in a given task context. A key prediction of the error-likelihood (EL) hypothesis is that the pMFC should exhibit enhanced activity to cues that are predictive of high compared with low error rates. We conducted 3 experiments, 2 using functional neuroimaging and 1 using event-related potentials, to test this prediction in human volunteers. The 3 experiments replicated previous research in showing clear evidence of increased pMFC activity associated with errors, conflict, negative feedback, and other aspects of task performance. However, none of the experiments yielded evidence for an effect of cue-signal...
Errors in human behavior elicit a cascade of brain activity related to performance monitoring and er...
Errors in human behavior elicit a cascade of brain activity related to performance monitoring and er...
As Seneca the Younger put it, "To err is human, but to persist is diabolical." To prevent repetition...
A recent study has proposed that posterior regions of the medial frontal cortex (pMFC) learn to pred...
A recent study has proposed that posterior regions of the medial frontal cortex (pMFC) learn to pred...
Contains fulltext : 54921.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A recent study...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
We have recently provided evidence that an error-related negativity (ERN), an ERP component generate...
We have recently provided evidence that an error-related negativity (ERN), an ERP component generate...
Failure to adapt performance following an error is a debilitating symptom of many neurological and p...
Errors in human behavior elicit a cascade of brain activity related to performance monitoring and er...
Errors in human behavior elicit a cascade of brain activity related to performance monitoring and er...
As Seneca the Younger put it, "To err is human, but to persist is diabolical." To prevent repetition...
A recent study has proposed that posterior regions of the medial frontal cortex (pMFC) learn to pred...
A recent study has proposed that posterior regions of the medial frontal cortex (pMFC) learn to pred...
Contains fulltext : 54921.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A recent study...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
Learning from errors is a critical feature of human cognition. It underlies our ability to adapt to ...
We have recently provided evidence that an error-related negativity (ERN), an ERP component generate...
We have recently provided evidence that an error-related negativity (ERN), an ERP component generate...
Failure to adapt performance following an error is a debilitating symptom of many neurological and p...
Errors in human behavior elicit a cascade of brain activity related to performance monitoring and er...
Errors in human behavior elicit a cascade of brain activity related to performance monitoring and er...
As Seneca the Younger put it, "To err is human, but to persist is diabolical." To prevent repetition...