Error Monitoring
Healthy monitoring improves performance. Excessive monitoring interrupts it.
Shrink Definition
Error monitoring is the brain's ongoing process of detecting mistakes, inconsistencies, unexpected outcomes, or deviations from intended goals. This system supports learning and adaptation. When excessively activated, it may contribute to perfectionism, anxiety, chronic self-monitoring, and overthinking.
Plain language
Your brain constantly checks whether something went wrong.
Shrink Insight
The mind can become so busy looking for mistakes that it misses the task itself.
Why it matters
Error monitoring affects: • learning • athletics • medicine • leadership • public speaking • relationships • confidence
Common misunderstanding
Careful isn't the same as hypervigilant.
Shrink Perspective
Improvement requires noticing mistakes. Not obsessing over them.
Shrink Reflection
Do you spend more time correcting mistakes or anticipating them?
Shrink Journal
Recall a recent mistake. How much time was spent learning? How much time was spent criticizing yourself?
Shrink Step
When noticing an error, ask only: "What's today's lesson?"
Shrink Minute
Correction is productive. Punishment rarely is.
Shrink Takeaway
Improve the process. Not the criticism.
Medical boundary
This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.
Evidence summary
Error monitoring has been extensively studied in cognitive neuroscience, executive functioning, obsessive- compulsive disorder research, and performance psychology.
Sources
DSM-5-TR (American Psychiatric Association); National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH); MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine); American Psychological Association (APA)
Reference status: authorities listed citation pending