Results from ERO models, including parameter estimates and fit statistics, are presented in Tables 3 and S4, available online. The only statistically significant effect observed involved sexual assaultive trauma before 10 years and no-go frontal theta oscillation. That is, when all 3 trauma exposures were examined simultaneously (Table 3), no statistically significant effects were observed for non-assaultive trauma, non-sexual assaultive trauma, or oscillations in the go condition. In models including gender, race/ethnicity, non-assaultive trauma, and non-sexual assaultive trauma as covariates, sexual assaultive trauma before 10 years was associated with decreased no-go frontal theta oscillation at baseline (intercept, p < .01; Table 3) and a decreased rate of change in no-go frontal theta oscillation from baseline to follow-up 4 (slope, p < .001; Table 3). This is displayed in Figures 2 and 3. No significant effects were observed in the go condition. Further, no statistically significant effects were observed for posterior delta ERO in the go or no-go condition (Table S4, available online).