Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 13 de 13
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; : 17470218241254119, 2024 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38684487

ABSTRACT

This study investigates the self-reference effect (SRE) with an ownership memory task across several age groups, providing the first age exploration of implicit ownership memory biases from adolescence to older adulthood (N = 159). Using a well-established ownership task, participants were required to sort images of grocery items as belonging to themselves or to a fictitious unnamed Other. After sorting and a brief distractor task, participants completed a surprise one-step source memory test. Overall, there was a robust SRE, with greater source memory accuracy for self-owned items. The SRE attenuated with age, such that the magnitude of difference between self and other memory diminished into older adulthood. Importantly, these findings were not due to a deterioration of memory for self-owned items, but rather an increase in memory performance for other-owned items. Linear mixed effects analyses showed self-biases in reaction times, such that self-owned items were identified more rapidly compared with other owned items. Again, age interacted with this effect showing that the responses of older adults were slowed, especially for other-owned items. Several theoretical implications were drawn from these findings, but we suggest that older adults may not experience ownership-related biases to the same degree as younger adults. Consequently, SREs through the lens of mere ownership may attenuate with age.

2.
Br J Dev Psychol ; 2024 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38660978

ABSTRACT

The self-memory system depends on the prioritization and capture of self-relevant information, so may be disrupted by difficulties in attending to, encoding and retrieving self-relevant information. The current study compares memory for self-referenced and other-referenced items in children with ADHD and typically developing comparison groups matched for verbal and chronological age. Children aged 5-14 (N = 90) were presented with everyday objects alongside an own-face image (self-reference trials) or an unknown child's image (other-referenced trials). They were asked whether the child shown would like the object, before completing a surprise source memory test. In a second task, children performed, and watched another person perform, a series of actions before their memory for the actions was tested. A significant self-reference effect (SRE) was found in the typically developing children (i.e. both verbal and chronological age-matched comparison groups) for the first task, with significantly better memory for self-referenced than other-referenced objects. However, children with ADHD showed no SRE, suggesting a compromised ability to bind information with the cognitive self-concept. In the second task, all groups showed superior memory for actions carried out by the self, suggesting a preserved enactment effect in ADHD. Implications and applications for the self-memory system in ADHD are discussed.

3.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; 77(2): 308-325, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37129461

ABSTRACT

Self-cues such as personal pronouns are known to elicit processing biases, such as attention capture and prioritisation in working memory. This may impact the performance of tasks that have a high attentional load like mathematical problem-solving. Here, we compared the speed and accuracy with which children solved numerical problems that included either the self-cue "you," or a different character name. First, we piloted a self-referencing manipulation with N = 52, 7 to 11 year-olds, testing performance on addition and subtraction problems that had either a single referent ("You"/"Sam") or more than one referent. We took into account operation and positioning of the pronoun and also measured performance on attention and working memory tasks. We found a robust accuracy advantage for problems that included "you," regardless of how many characters were included. The accuracy advantage for problems with a self-pronoun was not statistically associated with individual differences in attention or working memory. In our main study (9 to 11 year-olds, N = 144), we manipulated problem difficulty by creating consistently and inconsistently worded addition and subtraction problems. We found significantly higher speed and accuracy for problems that included "you." However, this effect varied by task difficulty, with the self-pronoun effect being strongest in the most difficult inconsistently worded, subtraction problems. The advantage of problems with a self-pronoun was not associated with individual differences in working memory. These findings suggest that self-cues like the pronoun "you" can be usefully applied in numerical processing tasks, an effect that may be attributable to the effects of self-cues on attention.


Subject(s)
Language , Problem Solving , Child , Humans , Cues , Memory, Short-Term , Attention
4.
Infant Ment Health J ; 44(5): 720-737, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37552614

ABSTRACT

This two-part study seeks to evidence art therapy intervention for parent-infant attachment relationships, looking at improvements to wellbeing and relationships. Study one was a controlled trial with 105 participating parent/caregivers and their infants (0-3-years), identified due to concerns about their relationship. They were quasi-randomized to attend a 12-week art therapy group or treatment as usual. Measures focused on parents' wellbeing and their perceptions of their relationship with their infant. In study 2 we analyzed video footage from the first and penultimate sessions of a sample of 37 dyads, looking for observable changes in the different channels of communication upon which attachments are predicated. The controlled trial showed intervention participants had significantly improved parental wellbeing, significant increases in attachment warmth and significant decreases in intrusion. This contrasted with the control sample who showed a significant decrease in wellbeing, stable warmth, and significant increases in intrusion. The observation study showed that there was a significant increase in the communicative behaviors from the parents to the infant which would support attachments between the first and penultimate sessions. We conclude that these results make a robust case for the inclusion of art therapy within the range of interventions available for at risk early relationships.


Este estudio en dos partes busca evidenciar la intervención terapéutica de arte para las relaciones afectivas progenitor-infante, mirando las mejoras al bienestar y las relaciones. El primer estudio se trata de un ensayo controlado con la participación de 105 progenitores/cuidadores y sus infantes (0-3 años), identificados en atención a preocupaciones acerca de su relación. Ellos fueron asignados cuasi al azar para participar en un grupo de terapia de arte o seguir el tratamiento acostumbrado. Las medidas se enfocan en el bienestar de los progenitores y sus percepciones acerca de sus relaciones con sus infantes. En el estudio 2 analizamos grabaciones de video de la primera y penúltima sesiones de un grupo muestra de 37 díadas, buscando cambios observables en los diferentes canales de comunicación sobre los cuales se fundamenta la unión afectiva. El ensayo controlado mostró que los participantes de la intervención habían mejorado significativamente su bienestar como progenitores, mejoras significativas en la calidez de la afectividad y significativas disminuciones en la intrusión. Esto contrastó con el grupo muestra de control que mostró una significativa disminución en el bienestar, una estable calidez y significativos aumentos en la intrusión. El estudio de observación mostró que había un aumento significativo en los comportamientos comunicativos de progenitores a infantes lo cual apoyaría los acoplamientos entre la primera y penúltima sesiones. Concluimos con que estos resultados formulan un caso sólido para la inclusión de la terapia de arte dentro de la gama de intervenciones disponibles para relaciones tempranas bajo riesgo.


Cette étude en deux parties s'est attachée à examinant l'intervention de thérapie artistique pour les relations d'attachement parent-nourrisson, étudiant les améliorations dans le bien-être et les relations. La première étude a consisté en un essai contrôlé avec 105 parents/personnes prenant soin des enfants et leurs bébés (0-3 ans), ayant été identifiés du fait d'inquiétudes à propos de leur relation. Ils ont été quasiment randomisés pour participer à un groupe de thérapie par l'art ou le traitement habituel. Les mesures ont mis l'accent sur le bien-être des parents et leurs perceptions de leur relation avec leur bébé. Dans la deuxième étude nous avons analysé des prises à la vidéo de la première et de la dernière session d'un échantillon de 37 dyades, cherchant des changements observables dans les différentes chaînes de communication sur lesquelles reposent les attachements. L'essai contrôlé a montré que les participants à l'intervention faisaient preuve d'améliorations importantes dans leur bien-être parental, dans la chaleur de l'attachement et de diminutions importantes dans l'intrusion. Cela a contrasté avec le groupe de contrôle qui a fait preuve d'une baisse importante du bien-être, d'une chaleur stable et d'augmentations importantes dans l'intrusion. Cette étude d'observation a montré qu'il y avait une augmentation importante des comportements communicatifs de la part des parents envers les bébés qui soutiendrait les attachements entre la première et la dernière session. Nous concluons que ces résultats présentent des arguments solides en faveur de l'inclusion de la thérapie par l'art au sein d'une éventail d'interventions disponibles pour les relations précoces à risque.


Subject(s)
Art Therapy , Humans , Infant , Communication , Parenting , Parents , Surveys and Questionnaires , Infant, Newborn , Child, Preschool
5.
Dev Sci ; : e13417, 2023 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37408284

ABSTRACT

Cultural comparisons suggest that an understanding of other minds may develop sooner in independent versus interdependent settings, and vice versa for inhibitory control. From a western lens, this pattern might be considered paradoxical, since there is a robust positive relationship between theory of mind (ToM) and inhibitory control in western samples. In independent cultures, an emphasis on one's own mind offers a clear route to 'simulate' other minds, and inhibitory control may be required to set aside one's own perspective to represent the perspective of others. However, in interdependent cultures, social norms are considered the key catalyst for behaviour, and metacognitive reflection and/or suppression of one's own perspective may not be necessary. The cross-cultural generalizability of the western developmental route to ToM is therefore questionable. The current study used an age-matched cross-sectional sample to contrast 56 Japanese and 56 Scottish 3-6-year-old's metacognition, ToM and inhibitory control skills. We replicated the expected cultural patterns for ToM (Scotland > Japan) and inhibitory control (Japan > Scotland). Supporting western developmental enrichment theories, we find that inhibitory control and metacognition predict theory of mind competence in Scotland. However, these variables cannot be used to predict Japanese ToM. This confirms that individualistic mechanisms do not capture the developmental mechanism underlying ToM in Japan, highlighting a bias in our understanding of ToM development. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: We replicate an independent cultural advantage for theory of mind (Scotland > Japan) and interdependent advantage for inhibitory control (Japan > Scotland). From a western lens, this pattern might be considered paradoxical, since there is a robust positive relationship between theory of mind and inhibitory control. Supporting western developmental enrichment theories, we find that the development of inhibitory control mediates the link between metacognition and theory of mind in Scotland. However, this model does not predict Japanese theory of mind, highlighting an individualistic bias in our mechanistic understanding of theory of mind development.

6.
Clin Psychol Rev ; 101: 102268, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36898295

ABSTRACT

Alterations in one's sense of self are often considered a significant psychological symptom of dementia. However, the self is not a unified construct; it consists of a set of closely connected, yet substantive, manifestations which might not be equally impacted by dementia. Recognising the multidimensional nature of the self, the current scoping review aimed to explore the nature and scope of the evidence demonstrating change in the psychological self in people living with dementia. Adopting a cognitive psychological framework, a hundred and five (105) quantitative and qualitative studies were reviewed, and findings were organised into three main types of self-manifestations: high-order manifestations, functional aspects of the self, and foundational manifestations. Overall, the results show that although there are alterations in some of these different manifestations of the self, these do not imply a global loss of selfhood. Despite notable cognitive changes during dementia, it seems that preserved aspects of self may be enough to compensate for potential weakening of some self-processes such as autobiographical recall. Better understanding alterations in selfhood is key to addressing psychological symptoms of people living with dementia, such as feelings of disconnection and reduced agency, and may inform new pathways for dementia care interventions.


Subject(s)
Dementia , Humans , Dementia/psychology , Qualitative Research , Emotions
7.
Front Psychol ; 13: 732562, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35664138

ABSTRACT

During the period of COVID-19 restrictions, we offered vulnerable families with 0 to 3 year old children boxes of art resources and guided creative activities to do together at home. This paper explores families' experiences of this intervention, highlighting their perceptions of change in wellbeing and attachment. There is a developing case for the social benefits of art, including the impact of arts on mental health and on the wellbeing of children. However, we know that social factors impact upon arts participation, and existing inequalities and mental health difficulties have been exacerbated in the context of the pandemic. This project aimed to adapt to restrictions, to provide a meaningful remote intervention, supporting parent-infant dyads to have positive interactions through art making. We sought to explore the benefits of this intervention for infants and parents with a view to understanding more about the psychological benefits of art participation and about ways to engage families into art making, as well as thinking about how best we can evidence these kinds of arts in health interventions. Preliminary findings showed promising outcomes from the art boxes and this paper brings together the full results, primarily based on interviews with sixteen parents and four referrers alongside collected feedback. We highlight potential mechanisms for change within the intervention and detail the perceived impact of the art boxes in supporting attachment. Parents felt that the art-boxes facilitated changes in their own wellbeing that would make them more available to connection, and recognised changes for babies that reflected their increased capacity to mentalise about their child. Importantly, there were also concrete changes for the dyad that represented improved connection, such as more playful time together and increased shared attention and eye contact. Our observations suggest that the quality of the parent-infant relationship benefited from home-based art intervention, and we speculate about the potential efficacy of this approach beyond the pandemic.

8.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 210: 105197, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34090236

ABSTRACT

The self-reference effect (SRE) is the memory enhancement associated with information linked to self. Unlike 4- to 6-year-olds, adults show stronger memory enhancement when self-processing is "evaluative" (eSRE) than when self-processing is "incidental" (iSRE). Here, the developmental change from shallow to rich self-processing was programmatically explored. In Study 1, 6- to 11-year-olds (N = 189) showed an eSRE = iSRE pattern. However, eSRE magnitude was limited by ceiling effects. Avoiding ceiling effects, Study 2 showed a developmentally stable eSRE > iSRE pattern in 8- to 11-year-olds (N = 96; ηp2 = .06). Study 3 used a different paradigm to confirm that 8- to 11-year-olds are capable of evaluative encoding even without concrete self stimuli. However, the evaluative boost for children was smaller than that for adults (N = 104; ηp2 = .06). Results are discussed with reference to the developing self and its capacity to support memory.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Recognition, Psychology , Self Concept , Adult , Child , Child Development/physiology , Humans
9.
Child Dev ; 91(2): e299-e314, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30644537

ABSTRACT

This article tests the hypothesis that self-development plays a role in the offset of childhood amnesia; assessing the importance of both the capacity to anchor a memory to the self-concept, and the strength of the self-concept as an anchor. This research demonstrates for the first time that the volume of 3- to 6-year old's specific autobiographical memories is predicted by both the volume of their self-knowledge, and their capacity for self-source monitoring within self-referencing paradigms (N = 186). Moreover, there is a bidirectional relation between self and memory, such that autobiographical memory mediates the link between self-source monitoring and self-knowledge. These predictive relations suggest that the self-memory system is active in early childhood.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Ego , Memory, Episodic , Child , Child, Preschool , Cultural Characteristics , Female , Humans , Male , Prejudice/psychology , Refugees/psychology , Self Concept , Social Identification , Theory of Mind
10.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 184: 123-138, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31029832

ABSTRACT

The phenomenon of perceptual bistability provides insights into aspects of perceptual processing not normally accessible to everyday experience. However, most experiments have been conducted in adults, and it is not clear to what extent key aspects of perceptual switching change through development. The current research examined the ability of 6-, 8-, and 10-year-old children (N = 66) to switch between competing percepts of ambiguous visual and auditory stimuli and links between switching rate, executive functions, and creativity. The numbers of switches participants reported in two visual tasks (ambiguous figure and ambiguous structure from motion) and two auditory tasks (verbal transformation and auditory streaming) were measured in three 60-s blocks. In addition, inhibitory control was measured with a Stroop task, set shifting was measured with a verbal fluency task, and creativity was measured with a divergent thinking task. The numbers of perceptual switches increased in all four tasks from 6 to 10 years of age but differed across tasks in that they were higher in the verbal transformation and ambigous structure-from-motion tasks than in the ambigous figure and auditory streaming tasks for all age groups. Although perceptual switching rates differed across tasks, there were predictive relationships between switching rates in some tasks. However, little evidence for the influence of central processes on perceptual switching was found. Overall, the results support the notion that perceptual switching is largely modality and task specific and that this property is already evident when perceptual switching emerges.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perception/physiology , Creativity , Executive Function/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Attention/physiology , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Photic Stimulation
11.
Dev Sci ; 20(3)2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26825413

ABSTRACT

Fifteen- to 18-month-old infants from three nationalities were observed interacting with their mothers and during two self-recognition tasks. Scottish interactions were characterized by distal contact, Zambian interactions by proximal contact, and Turkish interactions by a mixture of contact strategies. These culturally distinct experiences may scaffold different perspectives on self. In support, Scottish infants performed best in a task requiring recognition of the self in an individualistic context (mirror self-recognition), whereas Zambian infants performed best in a task requiring recognition of the self in a less individualistic context (body-as-obstacle task). Turkish infants performed similarly to Zambian infants on the body-as-obstacle task, but outperformed Zambians on the mirror self-recognition task. Verbal contact (a distal strategy) was positively related to mirror self-recognition and negatively related to passing the body-as-obstacle task. Directive action and speech (proximal strategies) were negatively related to mirror self-recognition. Self-awareness performance was best predicted by cultural context; autonomous settings predicted success in mirror self-recognition, and related settings predicted success in the body-as-obstacle task. These novel data substantiate the idea that cultural factors may play a role in the early expression of self-awareness. More broadly, the results highlight the importance of moving beyond the mark test, and designing culturally sensitive tests of self-awareness.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Self Concept , Awareness , Female , Humans , Individuality , Infant , Male , Mother-Child Relations/ethnology , Recognition, Psychology , Scotland , Turkey , Zimbabwe
12.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 155: 67-83, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27918978

ABSTRACT

Self-evaluative emotions depend on internalized social standards and motivate social action. However, there is a lack of empirical research documenting the impact of self-evaluative emotion on 3- and 4-year-olds' prosociality. Extant research relates children's experiences of guilt to empathetic concern and making amends. However, the relationship between guilt and both concern and making amends is potentially reductive. Empathetic concern involves similar bodily expressions to guilt, and amend making is used to distinguish guilt from shame in children. This is the first study to relate the development of both positive and negative self-evaluative emotions to empathetic concern and prosocial choice (making amends and spontaneous help). Results confirm that the broad capacity for self-evaluative emotion is established during the preschool years and relates to empathetic concern. Moreover, these social emotions can be used to predict prosocial choice. Making amends was best predicted by empathetic concern and by children's responses to achievement (pride following success and lack of shame following failure). Alongside moral pride, pride in response to achievement and resilience to shame was also the best predictor of spontaneous help. The data support the idea that young children's prosocial choices may be partially driven by the affective drive to maintain an "ideal" self. Psychologists have emphasized that in order to be adaptive, self-evaluative emotion should be guilt oriented rather than shame oriented. However, the adaptive role of pride has been neglected. We call on future research to redress the focus on negative self-evaluation in moral development and further explore the prosocial potential of pride.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Motivation/physiology , Self Concept , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Guilt , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Morals , Self-Assessment , Shame
13.
Dev Sci ; 20(4)2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27684381

ABSTRACT

When bilinguals speak, both fluent language systems become activated in parallel and exert an influence on speech production. As a consequence of maintaining separation between the two linguistic systems, bilinguals are purported to develop enhanced executive control functioning. Like bilinguals, individuals who speak two dialects must also maintain separation between two linguistic systems, albeit to a lesser degree. Across three tests of executive function, we compared bilingual and bidialectal children's performance to that of a monolingual control group. No evidence for a bidialectal advantage was found. However, in line with a growing number of recent partial and failed replications, we observed a significant bilingual advantage only in one measure in one task. This calls the robustness of the bilingual advantage into question. A comprehensive review of studies investigating advantages of inhibitory control and cognitive flexibility in bilingual children reveals that the bilingual advantage is likely to be both task and sample specific, and the interaction between these factors makes qualification of the effect challenging. These findings highlight the importance of tracking the impact of dual linguistic systems across the lifespan using tasks calibrated for difficulty across different ages.


Subject(s)
Executive Function , Multilingualism , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Task Performance and Analysis
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...