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Fig. 5 | International Journal of Bipolar Disorders

Fig. 5

From: Supra-second interval timing in bipolar disorder: examining the role of disorder sub-type, mood, and medication status

Fig. 5

Interval timing performance and frontal theta power do not differ as a function of mood. A Average MADRS scores for depressed patients are significantly higher than for euthymic patients. B To assess task-wide differences in oscillatory activity data from the whole interval-timing task were analyzed. C. Response distribution for individuals with bipolar disorder who were either euthymic or depressed at the time of data collection. D–E Groups do not differ in time estimation for the short [D] or the long [E] intervals. F Frontal theta power during the ITT did not differ between groups. *p < 0.05

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