Behavioral and EEG reactions in primary school-aged children to emotionally colored verbal stimuli with the condition of their own or forced choice
Author(s) -
Tuiana A. Aiusheeva,
А. Е. Сапрыгин,
Alexander N. Savostyanov,
Valentina V. Stepanova
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
social psychology and society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2221-1527
DOI - 10.17759/sps.2017080406
Subject(s) - psychology , electroencephalography , task (project management) , mistake , rhythm , quality (philosophy) , two alternative forced choice , developmental psychology , cognitive psychology , audiology , medicine , philosophy , management , psychiatry , political science , law , economics , aesthetics , epistemology
The aim of the study is to compare behavioral and EEG reactions of primary school-aged children during the recognition of syntactic errors in emotionally (positively or negatively) colored sentences that appeal to the choice of the child differently. 20 children (mean age 9,0±0,3 years, 12 boys, 8 girls) were examined. We found out that the children with a high quality of solving a linguistic task concentrate all their attention on finding an error in the sentences, and children with a low quality of solving a task demonstrate increased emotionality, possibly connected with their unsuccessfulness. The strongest EEG reactions in the ranges of alpha- and theta- rhythms were recorded in children with slow speed and bad quality of the solution of the task. The recognition of sentences with negative emotions took longer than sentences with positive emotions. The increase of emotions (synchronization in theta range) during the recognition of negative sentences was provoked by the expectation of failure and “identification” with it. The children found the mistake better in the sentences with their own choice than in the sentences that describes the forced-choice situation. Desynchronization (i.e. decrease in the spectral power) and synchronization (i.e. increase in spectral power) was detected on the EEG in the alpha-rhythm range. Desynchronization was associated with the recognition of sentences describing the children’s own choice; synchronization was recorded when recognizing sentences describing the forced-choice situation.
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