Developmental Changes in Visual and Auditory Inhibition in Early Childhood

2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 521-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacalyn Guy ◽  
Maria Rogers ◽  
Kim Cornish
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tracy Riggins ◽  
Rebecca M. C. Spencer

Abstract Previous research has established important developmental changes in sleep and memory during early childhood. These changes have been linked separately to brain development, yet few studies have explored their interrelations during this developmental period. The goal of this report was to explore these associations in 200 (100 female) typically developing 4- to 8-year-old children. We examined whether habitual sleep patterns (24-h sleep duration, nap status) were related to children’s performance on a source memory task and hippocampal subfield volumes. Results revealed that, across all participants, after controlling for age, habitual sleep duration was positively related to source memory performance. In addition, in younger (4–6 years, n = 67), but not older (6–8 years, n = 70) children, habitual sleep duration was related to hippocampal head subfield volume (CA2-4/DG). Moreover, within younger children, volume of hippocampal subfields varied as a function of nap status; children who were still napping (n = 28) had larger CA1 volumes in the body compared to children who had transitioned out of napping (n = 39). Together, these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that habitually napping children may have more immature cognitive networks, as indexed by hippocampal integrity. Furthermore, these results shed additional light on why sleep is important during early childhood, a period of substantial brain development.


NeuroImage ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. S118
Author(s):  
K McNealy ◽  
A Martin ◽  
LA Borofsky ◽  
JC Mazziotta ◽  
M Dapretto

2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 125-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E. Watamura ◽  
Bonny Donzella ◽  
Darlene A. Kertes ◽  
Megan R. Gunnar

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Stenhaug ◽  
Nilam Ram ◽  
Michael C. Frank

Do children’s abilities develop in tandem or on their own separate timetables? Piaget proposed that development proceeded globally through stages; more recent theories view development as more modular with different abilities developing independently and on different time-scales. The developmental differentiation hypothesis suggests that the structure of a child’s development is unitary early in infancy but becomes more complex with age. Despite an abundance of theoretical interest in this question, there is little empirical work on the macrostructure of developmental changes in early childhood. We investigate this structure using two large datasets of parent-reported developmental milestones. Applying item response theory models, we find that variation in development across infancy and early childhood is multidimensional. Consistent with the differentiation hypothesis, differences among older children are better described by higher-dimensional models. In addition, in longitudinal data, we find that, within-person changes in underlying abilities are highly coupled early in life but their coupling decreases by age 12 months. Our work provides a model-based method for linking holistic descriptions of early development to basic theoretical questions about the nature of change in childhood.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. e12700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jutta L Mueller ◽  
Angela D Friederici ◽  
Claudia Männel

1986 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 175-184
Author(s):  
Vicki G. Lumpkin ◽  
Roger J. Pasternak ◽  
G. David Cooper ◽  
Robert Pasnak

The Personality Assessment System (PAS) is derived from certain subtest scores on any Wechsler test by rather simple calculations. It purports to measure, among other personality attributes, developmental changes in the Internalized-Externalized (I-E) dimension of personality, which is akin to the Introversion-Extroversion construct reflected by some Rorschach measures. PAS scores from a tightly defined sample of normal adults were contrasted with Experience Balance (EB) and Body-image (B) scores derived from Rorschach protocols by “blind” scorers. Significant relations were found between EB ratios produced via the Exner and Klopfer scoring systems and the primitive (early childhood) I-E scores from the PAS. The B scores produced by the Body Image scoring system were related to the basic (adolescent) I-E PAS scores. Although significant, the PAS-Rorschach correlations were relatively poor, in part because it was difficult to define the center of the internalization-externalization continuum in terms of the Rorschach protocols. It is, nevertheless, provocative that traditional scorings of the Rorschach responses of adults assess differences not only in this personality trait, but also in its development, as determined from scaled scores on Wechsler subtests.


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