Are you as important as me? Self-other discrimination within trait-adjective processing

•ERP recordings to a SRET, inclusive of an ‘other’ referent.•Referent and valence cues are processed independently at encoding.•A self-positivity bias may exist at memory retrieval.•Mixed and blocked trial presentation modulate neural encoding and memory retrieval. Healthy adults typically display e...

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Published inBrain and cognition Vol. 142; p. 105569
Main Authors Hudson, Anna, Wilson, McLennon J.G., Green, Emma S., Itier, Roxane J., Henderson, Heather A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.07.2020
Elsevier Science
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ISSN0278-2626
1090-2147
1090-2147
DOI10.1016/j.bandc.2020.105569

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Summary:•ERP recordings to a SRET, inclusive of an ‘other’ referent.•Referent and valence cues are processed independently at encoding.•A self-positivity bias may exist at memory retrieval.•Mixed and blocked trial presentation modulate neural encoding and memory retrieval. Healthy adults typically display enhanced processing for self- (relative to other-) relevant and positive (relative to negative) information. However, it is unclear whether these two biases interact to form a self-positivity bias, whereby self-positive information receives prioritized processing. It is also unclear how a blocked versus mixed referent design impacts reference and valence processing. We addressed these questions using behavioral and electrophysiological indices across two studies using a Self-Referential Encoding Task, followed by surprise recall and recognition tasks. Early (P1) and late (LPP) event-related potentials were time-locked to a series of trait adjectives, encoded relative to oneself or a fictional character, with referent presented in a blocked (Exp. 1) or mixed (Exp. 2) trial design. Regardless of study design, participants recalled and recognized more self- than other-relevant adjectives, and recognized more positive than negative adjectives. Additionally, participants demonstrated larger LPP amplitudes for self-relevant and positive adjectives. The LPP self-relevance effect emerged earlier and persisted longer in the blocked (400–800 ms) versus mixed design (600–800 ms). The LPP valence effect was not apparent in the blocked design, but appeared late in the mixed design (600–1200 ms). Critically, the interaction between self-relevance and valence appeared only behaviorally in the mixed design, suggesting that overall self-relevance and valence independently impact neural socio-cognitive processing.
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ISSN:0278-2626
1090-2147
1090-2147
DOI:10.1016/j.bandc.2020.105569