Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control

Background: Despite developmental progression in the ability to control behavior in service of goals during kindergarten period, little is known about cognitive control mechanisms in later childhood and adolescence. Method: The present study provides detailed insights into children’s and adolesce...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qendresa Thaqi, Claudia Roebers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CeRIP 2020-05-01
Series:Journal of Clinical & Developmental Psychology
Online Access:http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/JCDP/article/view/2423
id doaj-74de5470def94b55b7e70f732723da00
record_format Article
spelling doaj-74de5470def94b55b7e70f732723da002020-11-25T03:12:46ZengCeRIPJournal of Clinical & Developmental Psychology2612-40332020-05-012210.6092/2612-4033/0110-24231929Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive controlQendresa Thaqi0Claudia Roebers1University of Bern, Department of Psychology, 3012 Bern, SwitzerlandUniversity of Bern, Department of Psychology, 3012 Bern, SwitzerlandBackground: Despite developmental progression in the ability to control behavior in service of goals during kindergarten period, little is known about cognitive control mechanisms in later childhood and adolescence. Method: The present study provides detailed insights into children’s and adolescents’ ability to flexibly and efficiently adapt their speed of responding in the context of a multiple-trial spatial conflict task. Based on the dual mechanisms of cognitive control, variability in response times, response consistency, trial-by trial adjustments surrounding errors, and developmental differences thereof were investigated. Results: Results showed that individuals become more reliable, more efficient, better adjusted, and thus of overall better in cognitive control with increasing age. Sequential adjustments of response times revealed that the participating 4th graders responded too fast when the task was running smoothly and slowed down too strongly after committing an error in comparison to 6th and 8th graders. Conclusion: The results suggest that the fine-tuning of speeded responses are key mechanisms for developmental progression in cognitive control. Furthermore, the current study attempts to increase researcher’s and practitioners’ awareness that detailed analysis of cognitive control processes in typically developing children and adolescents is needed for a better understanding when evaluating these processes in individuals with deviant cognitive development. Keywords: Cognitive Control; Error-Monitoring; Typical Developmenthttp://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/JCDP/article/view/2423
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qendresa Thaqi
Claudia Roebers
spellingShingle Qendresa Thaqi
Claudia Roebers
Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
Journal of Clinical & Developmental Psychology
author_facet Qendresa Thaqi
Claudia Roebers
author_sort Qendresa Thaqi
title Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
title_short Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
title_full Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
title_fullStr Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
title_full_unstemmed Developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
title_sort developmental progression in children’s and adolescents’ cognitive control
publisher CeRIP
series Journal of Clinical & Developmental Psychology
issn 2612-4033
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Background: Despite developmental progression in the ability to control behavior in service of goals during kindergarten period, little is known about cognitive control mechanisms in later childhood and adolescence. Method: The present study provides detailed insights into children’s and adolescents’ ability to flexibly and efficiently adapt their speed of responding in the context of a multiple-trial spatial conflict task. Based on the dual mechanisms of cognitive control, variability in response times, response consistency, trial-by trial adjustments surrounding errors, and developmental differences thereof were investigated. Results: Results showed that individuals become more reliable, more efficient, better adjusted, and thus of overall better in cognitive control with increasing age. Sequential adjustments of response times revealed that the participating 4th graders responded too fast when the task was running smoothly and slowed down too strongly after committing an error in comparison to 6th and 8th graders. Conclusion: The results suggest that the fine-tuning of speeded responses are key mechanisms for developmental progression in cognitive control. Furthermore, the current study attempts to increase researcher’s and practitioners’ awareness that detailed analysis of cognitive control processes in typically developing children and adolescents is needed for a better understanding when evaluating these processes in individuals with deviant cognitive development. Keywords: Cognitive Control; Error-Monitoring; Typical Development
url http://cab.unime.it/journals/index.php/JCDP/article/view/2423
work_keys_str_mv AT qendresathaqi developmentalprogressioninchildrensandadolescentscognitivecontrol
AT claudiaroebers developmentalprogressioninchildrensandadolescentscognitivecontrol
_version_ 1724648610036973568