Proefschrift_Holstein
Chapter 5
Table 5.1 Characteristics of participants and studies
Study A
Study B
Study C
Study D
Study E
Total
N
32
24
27
9
26
118
Age mean
15.44
21.92
38.78
58
59.58
35.03
Age range
14-17
18-27
24-65
29-67
42-69
14-69
Gender (% men)
59.4 %
41.67 %
44.44 %
77.78 %
57.69 %
53.4 %
Max
possible
€ 12.80
€ 8.80
€ 12.80
€ 12.80
€ 13.20
reward
High reward
€ 0.15
€ 0.10
€ 0.15
€ 0.15
€ 0.10
Earned
bonus:
€ 9.10 (34.05) 71.28 % (2.62)
€ 7.17 (17.45) 81.49% (1.98)
€10.38 (22.09) 81.10 % (1.73)
€ 10.04 (61.40) 78.44 %(4.80)
€ 12.05 (12.32)
€ 9.72 (19.50) 80.56% (1.18)
mean (SE)
Earned bonus: % of max: mean (SE)
91.29% (0.89)
Number of trials
160
160
160
160
240
fMRI control group patient study
fMRI control group patient study
Behavioral control group patient study
fMRI young healthy participants
Behavioral control group patient study
Type of study
ITI
and
RC
1-2s
2-6s
2-6s
2-6s
1-2s
interval
CT interval
400 msec.
2-6s
400 msec.
400 msec.
1-2s
SE = standard error; ITI = inter-trial-interval; RC = reward - task cue; CT = task cue - target.
adulthood, we assessed the effect of reward motivation on cognitive control across the life span, from adolescence (prior to the start of age-related decreases) to senescence.
Methods Participants and procedure
Pooling the data from five studies that were conducted between 2008 and 2015 enabled us to include 118 healthy participants (63 men, mean age 35.03, range 14-69). Three of these studies (N = 60) were conducted in a functional magnetic resonance environment: one in healthy young participants (Aarts et al., 2010) and the other 2 were patient studies (e.g. Aarts et al., 2015). We only included the healthy control participants who participated in these patient studies. The remaining participants were 26 (Aarts et al., 2012) and 32 healthy control participants who were tested in front of a computer screen ( table 5.1 ). All studies were
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