Osinsky Roman, Seeger Jennifer, Mussel Patrick, Hewig Johannes
Department of Psychology, Julius-Maximilians-University, Marcusstr. 9-11, 97070, Würzburg, Germany.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2016 Apr;16(2):261-75. doi: 10.3758/s13415-015-0387-y.
In many daily situations, the consequences of our actions are predicted by cues that are often social in nature. For instance, seeing the face of an evaluator (e.g., a supervisor at work) may activate certain evaluative expectancies, depending on the history of prior encounters with that particular person. We investigated how such face-induced expectancies influence neurocognitive functions of performance monitoring. We recorded an electroencephalogram while participants completed a time-estimation task, during which they received performance feedback from a strict and a lenient evaluator. During each trial, participants first saw the evaluator's face before performing the task and, finally, receiving feedback. Therefore, faces could be used as predictive cues for the upcoming evaluation. We analyzed electrocortical signatures of performance monitoring at the stages of cue processing, task performance, and feedback reception. Our results indicate that, at the cue stage, seeing the strict evaluator's face results in an anticipatory preparation of fronto-medial monitoring mechanisms, as reflected by a sustained negative-going amplitude shift (i.e., the contingent negative variation). At the performance stage, face-induced expectancies of a strict evaluation rule led to increases of early performance monitoring signals (i.e., frontal-midline theta power). At the final stage of feedback reception, violations of outcome expectancies differentially affected the feedback-related negativity and frontal-midline theta power, pointing to a functional dissociation between these signatures. Altogether, our results indicate that evaluative expectancies induced by face-cues lead to adjustments of internal performance monitoring mechanisms at various stages of task processing.
在许多日常情境中,我们行为的后果是由本质上往往具有社会性的线索预测的。例如,看到评估者的脸(如工作中的主管)可能会激活某些评估预期,这取决于与该特定人员先前接触的历史。我们研究了这种由面部引发的预期如何影响绩效监测的神经认知功能。在参与者完成一项时间估计任务时,我们记录了他们的脑电图,在此期间他们收到了一位严格评估者和一位宽松评估者的绩效反馈。在每次试验中,参与者在执行任务之前首先看到评估者的脸,最后收到反馈。因此,面部可以用作即将到来的评估的预测线索。我们分析了在线索处理、任务执行和反馈接收阶段绩效监测的皮层电信号特征。我们的结果表明,在线索阶段,看到严格评估者的脸会导致额中监测机制的预期性准备,这表现为持续的负向振幅偏移(即关联性负变)。在执行阶段,由面部引发的对严格评估规则的预期导致早期绩效监测信号(即额中线θ波功率)增加。在反馈接收的最后阶段,结果预期的违反对面反馈相关负波和额中线θ波功率有不同影响,表明这些信号特征之间存在功能分离。总之,我们的结果表明,由面部线索引发的评估预期会导致在任务处理的各个阶段对内部绩效监测机制进行调整。