Chapter 4: Cognitive Development Flashcards
Working memory
Information held in mind that is no longer present and can be manipulated. Holds 4 items at 4-5 years old, and 6 items at 9-10 years old
Language and working memory interact
Length of words (dependent on native language) can have an affect on number of words remembered in a digit span test
Brain areas of working memory
Prefrontal cortex and hippocampus. Response time decreases with age, and younger kids use their hippocampus more than older kids (possibly because it is helping until working memory develops)
Effect of economic status on working memory
Low income kids miss more duplicate letters and experience a leveling off of prefrontal cortex use in n-back tests that high income kids do not experience. Possibly due to high income kids getting more education and practice
N-back test
Detecting letter repeats. Have to remember a certain number of letters back at a time (hence the name).
Executive function
Cognitive control; uses working memory, cognitive flexibility, and inhibition
Cognitive flexibility
Ability to switch rule sets or tasks easily. Studied by Philip Elizo in a card sort task
Card Sort experiment (Elizo)
Tested 3 and 5 year olds with card sorting game. Changed the rules halfway through. 5 year olds could make the change, 3 year olds had trouble.
Inhibition
Self control; inhibition of responses to events. Can shift based on the reliability of the person/situation requiring inhibition. Can be trained through play
Marshmallow task
Children are told they can have double the reward if they wait for the experimenter to return. Those with less impulse control were found to have lower SAT scores and less prefrontal response at 40
Theory of Mind
Recognizing others can have beliefs different than your own. Tested using False Belief tasks. Relies on working memory and other cognitive abilities
False Belief task
One doll moves another doll’s toy. Children are asked where they think the second doll will look for their toy when they come back. Used to evaluate development of theory of mind
Piaget’s Theory of Development
Constructivist (children construct knowledge themselves); assumes kids are intrinsically motivated to actively learn. Claims nature and nurture interact. Discontinuous.
Assimilation
Fit new knowledge into an existing schema
Accomodation
Adapt current schemas to account for new knowledge
Equilibriation
Balance of assimilation and accomodation
Sensorimotor stage
0-2 years old; experience the world through senses and actions