Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?

Executive functions enable and support most of our daily cognitive functioning. Within the number of executive functions proposed, updating, inhibition and shifting are most often considered as the three core executive functions. Cognitive training paradigms provide a platform for a possible enhance...

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Main Authors: Anja Podlesek, Marina Martinčević, Andrea Vranić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Slovenian Psychologists' Association 2021-05-01
Series:Psihološka Obzorja
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psiholoska-obzorja.si/arhiv_clanki/2021/podlesek_et_al.pdf
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spelling doaj-5d33786e56434ad1a1f5ed58adf7b1672021-05-12T09:29:01ZengSlovenian Psychologists' AssociationPsihološka Obzorja2350-51412021-05-013013815210.20419/2021.30.529Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?Anja PodlesekMarina MartinčevićAndrea VranićExecutive functions enable and support most of our daily cognitive functioning. Within the number of executive functions proposed, updating, inhibition and shifting are most often considered as the three core executive functions. Cognitive training paradigms provide a platform for a possible enhancement of these functions. Since updating training has been studied to a greater extent, we wanted to investigate the effectiveness of inhibition and shifting training in this study. Emerging adults (psychology students) were randomly assigned either to the inhibition training (based on the Simon task; n = 36) or to the shifting training (based on the task switching paradigm; n = 35). Both groups underwent twelve 20-minute sessions distributed over four weeks. Measurements before and after the training included criterion tasks (i.e. the training tasks), near-transfer tasks (i.e. tasks that address the trained functions but use different types of stimuli or rules to respond), and far-transfer tasks (i.e., tasks that address untrained cognitive functions). The control participants (n = 36) were tested with a combination of these tasks. Both training groups improved their criteria task performance over time, while convincing training-related gains were not found in either near- or far-transfer tasks. This study raises some conceptual questions for the training of executive functions with respect to a sample of emerging adults with above-average cognitive abilities, motivational elements of training, and the role of executive functions in more complex everyday cognitive activities.http://psiholoska-obzorja.si/arhiv_clanki/2021/podlesek_et_al.pdfcognitive trainingexecutive functionsinhibitionshifting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anja Podlesek
Marina Martinčević
Andrea Vranić
spellingShingle Anja Podlesek
Marina Martinčević
Andrea Vranić
Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
Psihološka Obzorja
cognitive training
executive functions
inhibition
shifting
author_facet Anja Podlesek
Marina Martinčević
Andrea Vranić
author_sort Anja Podlesek
title Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
title_short Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
title_full Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
title_fullStr Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
title_full_unstemmed Can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
title_sort can inhibition or shifting training enhance cognitive abilities in emerging adults?
publisher Slovenian Psychologists' Association
series Psihološka Obzorja
issn 2350-5141
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Executive functions enable and support most of our daily cognitive functioning. Within the number of executive functions proposed, updating, inhibition and shifting are most often considered as the three core executive functions. Cognitive training paradigms provide a platform for a possible enhancement of these functions. Since updating training has been studied to a greater extent, we wanted to investigate the effectiveness of inhibition and shifting training in this study. Emerging adults (psychology students) were randomly assigned either to the inhibition training (based on the Simon task; n = 36) or to the shifting training (based on the task switching paradigm; n = 35). Both groups underwent twelve 20-minute sessions distributed over four weeks. Measurements before and after the training included criterion tasks (i.e. the training tasks), near-transfer tasks (i.e. tasks that address the trained functions but use different types of stimuli or rules to respond), and far-transfer tasks (i.e., tasks that address untrained cognitive functions). The control participants (n = 36) were tested with a combination of these tasks. Both training groups improved their criteria task performance over time, while convincing training-related gains were not found in either near- or far-transfer tasks. This study raises some conceptual questions for the training of executive functions with respect to a sample of emerging adults with above-average cognitive abilities, motivational elements of training, and the role of executive functions in more complex everyday cognitive activities.
topic cognitive training
executive functions
inhibition
shifting
url http://psiholoska-obzorja.si/arhiv_clanki/2021/podlesek_et_al.pdf
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