Development of cognitive control and executive functions from 4 to 13 years: Evidence from manipulations of memory, inhibition, and task switching

被引:1488
作者
Davidson, Matthew C.
Amso, Dima
Cruess Anderson, Loren
Diamond, Adele
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Dept Psychiat, Vancouver, BC V6T 2A1, Canada
[2] British Columbia Childrens Hosp, Div Child & Adolescent Psychiat, Vancouver, BC V6H 3V4, Canada
[3] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Med, Shriver Ctr, Waltham, MA USA
[4] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Psychol, Amherst, NY USA
[5] Cornell Univ, Weill Med Coll, Sackler Inst Dev Psychobiol, New York, NY 10021 USA
关键词
task switching; inhibition; working memory; Simon effect; asymmetric switch costs; global and local switch costs; stimulus-response compatibility; development; children; frontal lobe;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2006.02.006
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Predictions concerning development, interrelations, and possible independence of working memory, inhibition, and cognitive flexibility were tested in 325 participants (roughly 30 per age from 4 to 13 years and young adults; 50% female). All were tested on the same computerized battery, designed to manipulate memory and inhibition independently and together, in steady state (single-task blocks) and during task-switching, and to be appropriate over the lifespan and for neuroimaging (fMRI). This is one of the first studies, in children or adults, to explore: (a) how memory requirements interact with spatial compatibility and (b) spatial incompatibility effects both with stimulus-specific rules (Simon task) and with higher-level, conceptual rules. Even the youngest children could hold information in mind, inhibit a dominant response, and combine those as long as the inhibition required was steady-state and the rules remained constant. Cognitive flexibility (switching between rules), even with memory demands minimized, showed a longer developmental progression, with 13-year-olds still not at adult levels. Effects elicited only in Mixed blocks with adults were found in young children even in single-task blocks; while young children could exercise inhibition in steady state it exacted a cost not seen in adults, who (unlike young children) seemed to re-set their default response when inhibition of the same tendency was required throughout a block. The costs associated with manipulations of inhibition were greater in young children while the costs associated with increasing memory demands were greater in adults. Effects seen only in RT in adults were seen primarily in accuracy in young children. Adults slowed down on difficult trials to preserve accuracy; but the youngest children were impulsive; their RT remained more constant but at an accuracy cost on difficult trials. Contrary to our predictions of independence between memory and inhibition, when matched for difficulty RT correlations between these were as high as 0.8, although accuracy correlations were less than half that. Spatial incompatibility effects and global and local switch costs were evident in children and adults, differing only in size. Other effects (e.g., asymmetric switch costs and the interaction of switching rules and switching response-sites) differed fundamentally over age. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2037 / 2078
页数:42
相关论文
共 168 条
[1]  
ALLPORT A, 1994, ATTENTION PERFORM, V15, P421
[2]  
Allport A, 2000, CONTROL OF COGNITIVE PROCESSES: ATTENTION AND PERFORMANCE XVIII, P35
[3]   ON THE STATUS OF INHIBITORY MECHANISMS IN COGNITION - MEMORY RETRIEVAL AS A MODEL CASE [J].
ANDERSON, MC ;
SPELLMAN, BA .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1995, 102 (01) :68-100
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2000, CONTROL COGNITIVE PR
[5]   A componential analysis of task-switching deficits associated with lesions of left and right frontal cortex [J].
Aron, AR ;
Monsell, S ;
Sahakian, BJ ;
Robbins, TW .
BRAIN, 2004, 127 :1561-1573
[6]   Distractibility during selection-for-action: differential deficits in Huntington's disease and following frontal lobe damage [J].
Aron, AR ;
Sahakian, BJ ;
Robbins, TW .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2003, 41 (09) :1137-1147
[7]   The ability to activate and inhibit speeded responses: Separate developmental trends [J].
Band, GPH ;
van der Molen, MW ;
Overtoom, CCE ;
Verbaten, MN .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 75 (04) :263-290
[8]   The role of the inferior frontal junction area in cognitive control [J].
Brass, M ;
Derrfuss, J ;
Forstmann, B ;
von Cramon, DY .
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2005, 9 (07) :314-316
[9]   When the same response has different meanings: recoding the response meaning in the lateral prefrontal cortex [J].
Brass, M ;
Ruge, H ;
Meiran, N ;
Rubin, O ;
Koch, I ;
Zysset, S ;
Prinz, W ;
von Cramon, DY .
NEUROIMAGE, 2003, 20 (02) :1026-1031
[10]   Neural mechanisms of transient and sustained cognitive control during task switching [J].
Braver, TS ;
Reynolds, JR ;
Donaldson, DI .
NEURON, 2003, 39 (04) :713-726