The Utility of Event-Related Potentials in Clinical Psychology

Posted: 24 May 2019

See all articles by Greg Hajcak

Greg Hajcak

Florida State University - Department of Biomedical Sciences

Julia Klawohn

Florida State University - Department of Biomedical Sciences

Alexandria Meyer

Florida State University - Department of Biomedical Sciences

Date Written: May 2019

Abstract

Event-related potentials (ERPs) are direct measures of brain activity that can be leveraged for clinically meaningful research. They can relate robustly both to continuous measures of individual difference and to categorical diagnoses in ways that clarify similarities and distinctions between apparently related disorders and traits. ERPs can be linked to genetic risk, can act as moderators of developmental trajectories and responses to stress, and can be leveraged to identify those at greater risk for psychopathology, especially when used in combination with other neural and self-report measures. ERPs can inform models of the development of, and risk for, psychopathology. Finally, ERPs can be used as targets for existing and novel interventions and prevention efforts. We provide concrete examples for each of these possibilities by focusing on programmatic research on the error-related negativity and anxiety, and thus show that ERPs are poised to make greater contributions toward the identification, prediction, treatment, and prevention of mental disorders.

Suggested Citation

Hajcak, Greg and Klawohn, Julia and Meyer, Alexandria, The Utility of Event-Related Potentials in Clinical Psychology (May 2019). Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, Vol. 15, pp. 71-95, 2019, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3392829 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-050718-095457

Greg Hajcak (Contact Author)

Florida State University - Department of Biomedical Sciences ( email )

United States

Julia Klawohn

Florida State University - Department of Biomedical Sciences

United States

Alexandria Meyer

Florida State University - Department of Biomedical Sciences

United States

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