» Articles » PMID: 29226960

An Adaptive Orienting Theory of Error Processing

Overview
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2017 Dec 12
PMID 29226960
Citations 67
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The ability to detect and correct action errors is paramount to safe and efficient goal-directed behaviors. Existing work on the neural underpinnings of error processing and post-error behavioral adaptations has led to the development of several mechanistic theories of error processing. These theories can be roughly grouped into adaptive and maladaptive theories. While adaptive theories propose that errors trigger a cascade of processes that will result in improved behavior after error commission, maladaptive theories hold that error commission momentarily impairs behavior. Neither group of theories can account for all available data, as different empirical studies find both impaired and improved post-error behavior. This article attempts a synthesis between the predictions made by prominent adaptive and maladaptive theories. Specifically, it is proposed that errors invoke a nonspecific cascade of processing that will rapidly interrupt and inhibit ongoing behavior and cognition, as well as orient attention toward the source of the error. It is proposed that this cascade follows all unexpected action outcomes, not just errors. In the case of errors, this cascade is followed by error-specific, controlled processing, which is specifically aimed at (re)tuning the existing task set. This theory combines existing predictions from maladaptive orienting and bottleneck theories with specific neural mechanisms from the wider field of cognitive control, including from error-specific theories of adaptive post-error processing. The article aims to describe the proposed framework and its implications for post-error slowing and post-error accuracy, propose mechanistic neural circuitry for post-error processing, and derive specific hypotheses for future empirical investigations.

Citing Articles

Does the stop-signal P3 reflect inhibitory control?.

Hervault M, Soh C, Wessel J Cortex. 2025; 183:232-250.

PMID: 39754857 PMC: 11839379. DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2024.12.005.


Neural markers of error processing relate to task performance, but not to substance-related risks and problems and externalizing problems in adolescence and emerging adulthood.

Boer O, Wiker T, Bukhari S, Kjelkenes R, Timpe C, Voldsbekk I Dev Cogn Neurosci. 2024; 71():101500.

PMID: 39729859 PMC: 11732202. DOI: 10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101500.


Unexpected sounds induce a rapid inhibition of eye-movement responses.

Vasilev M, Ozkan Z, Kirkby J, Nuthmann A, Parmentier F Psychophysiology. 2024; 62(1):e14728.

PMID: 39690142 PMC: 11652409. DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14728.


Distraction by unexpected sounds: comparing response repetition and response switching.

Garcia-Lopez E, Parmentier F Front Psychol. 2024; 15:1451008.

PMID: 39417033 PMC: 11480036. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1451008.


High stakes slow responding, but do not help overcome Pavlovian biases in humans.

Algermissen J, den Ouden H Learn Mem. 2024; 31(8).

PMID: 39284619 PMC: 11407693. DOI: 10.1101/lm.054017.124.