학술논문

Reliability of the fMRI-based assessment of self-evaluation in individuals with internet gaming disorder.
Document Type
Article
Source
European Archives of Psychiatry & Clinical Neuroscience. Sep2022, Vol. 272 Issue 6, p1119-1134. 16p. 2 Color Photographs, 2 Black and White Photographs, 1 Diagram, 5 Charts.
Subject
*GAMING disorder
*SELF-evaluation
*INTERNET addiction
*MENTAL representation
*STATISTICAL reliability
Language
ISSN
0940-1334
Abstract
The self-concept—defined as the cognitive representation of beliefs about oneself—determines how individuals view themselves, others, and their actions. A negative self-concept can drive gaming use and internet gaming disorder (IGD). The assessment of the neural correlates of self-evaluation gained popularity to assess the self-concept in individuals with IGD. This attempt, however, seems to critically depend on the reliability of the investigated task-fMRI brain activation. As first study to date, we assessed test–retest reliability of an fMRI self-evaluation task. Test–retest reliability of neural brain activation between two separate fMRI sessions (approximately 12 months apart) was investigated in N = 29 healthy participants and N = 11 individuals with pathological internet gaming. We computed reliability estimates for the different task contrasts (self, a familiar, and an unknown person) and the contrast (self > familiar and unknown person). Data indicated good test–retest reliability of brain activation, captured by the "self", "familiar person", and "unknown person" contrasts, in a large network of brain regions in the whole sample (N = 40) and when considering both experimental groups separately. In contrast to that, only a small set of brain regions showed moderate to good reliability, when investigating the contrasts ("self > familiar and unknown person"). The lower reliability of the contrast can be attributed to the fact that the constituting contrast conditions were highly correlated. Future research on self-evaluation should be cautioned by the findings of substantial local reliability differences across the brain and employ methods to overcome these limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]