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1.
J Adolesc ; 95(1): 181-189, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36281743

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Adolescence is a time of increased emotional reactivity and improving cognitive control. Mindfulness meditation training may foster adolescents' cognitive control and emotional regulation skills; however little is known about the impact of mindfulness training in adolescents compared to adults. We examined the effect of mindfulness meditation versus a closely matched active control condition (relaxation training) on behavioral and neural measures of cognitive control and emotional reactivity in a small group of adolescents and adults. METHODS: Structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging data were collected before and after 8 weeks of training in 26 adolescent (12-14 years) and 17 adult (23-33 years) female participants in the United Kingdom while they completed an n-back task with emotional face distractors and an attentional control task. Participants of each group chose a class date/time and the classes were then randomly allocated to mindfulness or relaxation conditions. RESULTS: Compared to relaxation training, mindfulness training led to an increase in the speed of reorienting attention across age groups. In addition, there was preliminary evidence for reduced amygdala response to emotional face distractors in adolescents after mindfulness training. CONCLUSIONS: An 8-week mindfulness program showed similar facilitative effects in adolescent and adult females on the reorienting of attention, a skill that is repeatedly practiced during mindfulness meditation. Mindfulness also reduced left amygdala reactivity to emotional face distractors in adolescents only. Mindfulness meditation practice can therefore have a facilitative effect on female adolescents' attentional control, and possibly attenuate their emotional reactivity.


Subject(s)
Meditation , Mindfulness , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Amygdala/diagnostic imaging , Amygdala/physiology , Attention , Meditation/methods , Meditation/psychology , Mindfulness/methods , Neuroimaging
2.
Dev Sci ; 18(6): 957-71, 2015 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25483236

ABSTRACT

Little is known about the mechanisms underlying a ubiquitous behavior in preschoolers, help-seeking. We tested the hypothesis that preschoolers' awareness of their own uncertainty is associated with help-seeking. Three-, 4-, and 5-year-olds (N = 125) completed a perceptual identification task twice: once independently and once when they could request help from a confederate whose competence level was manipulated. Consistent with our hypothesis, participants sought help more frequently on trials for which, when required to answer independently, they expressed lower confidence. Children in the bad-helper condition were slower to respond after receiving help than those in the good-helper condition. Finally, females and children with more advanced theory of mind were more likely to seek help, identifying additional factors that relate to help-seeking.


Subject(s)
Awareness/physiology , Child Development , Decision Making/physiology , Help-Seeking Behavior , Uncertainty , Age Factors , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Individuality , Judgment/physiology , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Photic Stimulation , Predictive Value of Tests , Reaction Time/physiology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Theory of Mind
3.
Psychol Sci ; 25(4): 883-92, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24503871

ABSTRACT

In the research reported here, we examined whether individual differences in authoritarianism have expressions in early childhood. We expected that young children would be more responsive to cues of deviance and status to the extent that their parents endorsed authoritarian values. Using a sample of 43 preschoolers and their parents, we found support for both expectations. Children of parents high in authoritarianism trusted adults who adhered to convention (vs. adults who did not) more than did children of parents low in authoritarianism. Furthermore, compared with children of parents low in authoritarianism, children of parents high in authoritarianism gave greater weight to a status-based "adult = reliable" heuristic in trusting an ambiguously conventional adult. Findings were consistent using two different measures of parents' authoritarian values. These findings demonstrate that children's trust-related behaviors vary reliably with their parents' orientations toward authority and convention, and suggest that individual differences in authoritarianism express themselves well before early adulthood.


Subject(s)
Authoritarianism , Child Development , Individuality , Parents , Trust , Adult , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Social Values
4.
Mem Cognit ; 42(1): 151-63, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23835600

ABSTRACT

Building on the simulated-amnesia work of Christianson and Bylin (Applied Cognitive Psychology, 13, 495-511, 1999), the present research introduces a new paradigm for the scientific study of memory of childhood sexual abuse information. In Session 1, participants mentally took the part of an abuse victim as they read an account of the sexual assault of a 7-year-old. After reading the narrative, participants were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions: They (1) rehearsed the story truthfully (truth group), (2) left out the abuse details of the story (omission group), (3) lied about the abuse details to indicate that no abuse had occurred (commission group), or (4) did not recall the story during Session 1 (no-rehearsal group). One week later, participants returned for Session 2 and were asked to truthfully recall the narrative. The results indicated that, relative to truthful recall, untruthful recall or no rehearsal at Session 1 adversely affected memory performance at Session 2. However, untruthful recall resulted in better memory than did no rehearsal. Moreover, gender, PTSD symptoms, depression, adult attachment, and sexual abuse history significantly predicted memory for the childhood sexual abuse scenario. Implications for theory and application are discussed.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse, Sexual/psychology , Individuality , Mental Recall/physiology , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Practice, Psychological , Random Allocation , Repression, Psychology , Young Adult
5.
Child Dev ; 84(2): 726-36, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23278486

ABSTRACT

Although some evidence indicates that even very young children engage in rudimentary forms of strategic behavior, the underlying mechanisms remain largely unknown. This study tested the hypothesis that uncertainty monitoring underlies such behaviors. Three-, four-, and five-year-old children (N = 88) completed a perceptual discrimination task. Results indicated that children are more likely to withhold (vs. volunteer) responses on trials for which, when forced to provide an answer, they report subjective uncertainty (vs. subjective certainty). Furthermore, uncertainty monitoring positively predicted the strategic regulation of accuracy via withholding of incorrect responses, even when controlling for individual differences in inhibitory control. Overall, results suggest that children's awareness of their own knowledge states contributes to early strategic behavior.


Subject(s)
Awareness/physiology , Child Behavior/physiology , Judgment/physiology , Knowledge , Uncertainty , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Memory/physiology , Psychological Tests
6.
Adv Child Dev Behav ; 40: 379-412, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21887967

ABSTRACT

While an abundance of research has investigated the development of the automatic and controlled processes through which individuals control their thoughts, emotions, and actions, less research has emphasized the role of the self in self-regulation. This chapter synthesizes four literatures that have examined the mechanisms through which the individual acts in a managerial role, evaluating the current status of the system and initiating regulatory actions as necessary. Taken together, these literatures (on executive function, error monitoring, metacognition, and uncertainty monitoring) suggest that self-reflection plays a critical role in self-regulation, and that developmental improvements in self-reflection (via increasing levels of conscious awareness and enhanced calibration of monitoring systems) may serve as driving forces underlying developmental improvement (and temperamental individual differences) in children's ability to control their thoughts and actions.


Subject(s)
Attention , Cognition , Executive Function , Internal-External Control , Adolescent , Awareness , Child , Humans , Self Concept , Social Adjustment , Social Behavior , Social Responsibility , Uncertainty
7.
Child Dev ; 82(6): 1778-87, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21954871

ABSTRACT

This study examined the development of uncertainty monitoring in early childhood. Specifically, this study tested the prediction that preschoolers can reflect on their sense of certainty about the likely accuracy of their decisions, and it examined whether this ability differs across domains. Three-, 4-, and 5-year-olds (N = 74) completed a perceptual identification and a lexical identification task in which they reported whether they were certain or uncertain about their answers. Results showed that even 3-year-olds provided confidence judgments that discriminated accurate from inaccurate responses, but this discrimination increased with age. Furthermore, results suggest that 3-year-olds primarily rely on response latency to assess certainty, whereas older preschoolers do not. Overall, these findings suggest that uncertainty monitoring emerges and develops during the preschool years.


Subject(s)
Attention , Child Development , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Perceptual Masking , Uncertainty , Child, Preschool , Decision Making , Female , Humans , Judgment , Male , Reaction Time , Semantics
8.
Dev Sci ; 13(4): 611-21, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20590725

ABSTRACT

Children aged 7 and younger encounter great difficulty in assessing whether lack of memory for an event indicates that the event was not experienced. The present research investigated whether this difficulty results from a general inability to evaluate memory absence or from a specific inability to monitor one feature of memory absence that has been examined in previous studies, namely expected memorability. Seven-, 8- and 9-year-olds, and adults (N = 72) enacted, imagined and confabulated about bizarre and common actions. Two weeks later, participants were asked to recognize the actions that had been enacted. Even 7-year-olds monitored the relative familiarity of rejected distracters (i.e. reported higher confidence for the rejection of novel versus imagined and confabulated distracters). However, only older children and adults exhibited the ability to monitor expected memorability (e.g. reported higher confidence for the rejection of bizarre versus common distracters). These results suggest that young children exhibit specific, rather than general, deficits in monitoring memory absence, and provide an indication of the specific domains in which lack-of-memory monitoring improves during childhood.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Mental Recall/physiology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Retention, Psychology/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Analysis of Variance , Child , Humans , Imagination/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Young Adult
9.
Dev Sci ; 13(2): 355-62, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20136932

ABSTRACT

Using a new method for studying the development of false-memory formation, we examined developmental differences in the rates at which 6-, 7-, 9-, 10-, and 18-year-olds made two types of memory errors: backward causal-inference errors (i.e. falsely remembering having viewed the non-viewed cause of a previously viewed effect), and gap-filling errors (i.e. falsely remembering having viewed a script-consistent event that was not actually witnessed). Previous research suggests that backward causal-inference errors are supported by recollection, whereas gap-filling errors are supported by familiarity. We hypothesized that age differences in these errors would parallel the developmental trajectories of these processes. As predicted, age-related increases in backward causal-inference errors were observed, while gap-filling errors were age-invariant, suggesting that recollection-based memory distortions increase with age while familiarity-based memory distortions are relatively stable from middle childhood through adulthood.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Development , Child Development , Mental Recall , Recognition, Psychology , Adolescent , Age Factors , Child , Female , Humans , Italy , Male , Memory , Psychological Theory , White People
10.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 99(3): 157-81, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18191139

ABSTRACT

This research examined the development of the ability to monitor memory strength and memory absence at retrieval. In two experiments, 7-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and adults enacted and imagined enacting a series of bizarre and common actions. Two weeks later, they completed a memory test in which they were asked to determine whether each action had been enacted, had been imagined, or was novel and to provide a confidence judgment for each response. Results showed that participants across age groups successfully monitored differences in strength between memories for enacted actions and memories for imagined actions. However, compared with 10-year-olds and adults, 7-year-olds exhibited deficits in monitoring of differences in memory strength among imagined actions as well as deficits in monitoring memory absence. Results underscore metamemory developments that have important implications for memory accuracy.


Subject(s)
Attention , Child Development , Mental Recall , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Female , Humans , Imagination , Judgment , Male , Psychomotor Performance , Reality Testing , Retention, Psychology
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