Impulse inhibition in people with Internet addiction disorder: Electrophysiological evidence from a Go/NoGo study
Research highlights
▶ Inhibitory ability is impaired in IAD-afflicted people. ▶ The lower inhibitory control ability in IAD can be indexed by higher NoGo-P3 amplitude. ▶ The inferior response inhibition ability of the IAD group might have come from the first stages of conflict detection to the later stage of response evaluation or successful response inhibition.
Section snippets
Acknowledgement
This research was supported by National Science Foundation of China (30900405).
References (31)
- et al.
Event-related potentials for response inhibition in Parkinson's disease
Neuropsychologia
(2005) - et al.
Inhibition, response mode, and stimulus probability: a comparative event-related potential study
Clinical Neurophysiology
(2002) - et al.
Response priming in a go/nogo task: do we have to explain the go/nogo N2 effect in terms of response activation instead of inhibition?
Clinical Neurophysiology
(2001) - et al.
Discrimination of emotional facial expressions in a visual oddball task: an ERP study
Biological Psychology
(2002) - et al.
The relationship between impulsivity and Internet addiction in a sample of Chinese adolescents
European Psychiatry
(2007) - et al.
Frontal lobe dysfunction in pathological gambling patients
Biological Psychiatry
(2002) Cognitive-behavioral model of pathological Internet use
Computers in Human Behavior
(2001)- et al.
The N2 in go/no-go tasks reflects conflict monitoring not response inhibition
Brain and Cognition
(2004) - et al.
Internet addiction: meta-synthesis of qualitative research for the decade 1996–2006
Computers in Human Behavior
(2008) - et al.
Electrophysiological correlates for response inhibition in intellectually gifted children: a Go/NoGo study
Neuroscience Letters
(2009)
ERP components in Go/Nogo tasks and their relation to inhibition
Acta Psychologica
(1999)
The development of preparation, conflict monitoring and inhibition from early childhood to young adulthood; a Go/Nogo ERP study
Brain Research
(2006)
Attention deficit and impulsivity: selecting, shifting, and stopping
International Journal of Psychophysiology
(2005)
Comparative analysis of event-related potentials during Go/NoGo and CPT: decomposition of electrophysiological markers of response inhibition and sustained attention
Brain Research
(2006)
Neurophysiological signals of working memory in normal aging
Cognitive Brain Research
(2001)
Cited by (212)
Cognitive factors contribute to the symbolic and the non-symbolic SNARC effects in children and adults
2024, Cognitive DevelopmentSpontaneous brain microstates correlate with impaired inhibitory control in internet addiction disorder
2023, Psychiatry Research - NeuroimagingImpact of social media use on executive function
2023, Computers in Human Behavior
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.