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1.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 243: 105915, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38555697

ABSTRACT

Inhibitory control develops rapidly and nonlinearly, making its accurate assessment challenging. This research investigated the developmental dynamics of accuracy and response latency in inhibitory control assessment of 3- to 6-year-old children in a longitudinal study (N = 431; 212 girls; Mage = 4.86 years, SD = 0.99) and a cross-sectional study (N = 135; 71 girls; Mage = 4.24 years, SD = 0.61). We employed a computerized Stroop task to measure inhibitory control, with fluid intelligence serving as a covariate. A growth curve analysis revealed that children who reached an accuracy threshold of 80% earlier demonstrated faster improvements in response latency. Both the cross-sectional and longitudinal findings demonstrated a positive association between response latency in the inhibitory control task and fluid intelligence, but only when participants had achieved and maintained high accuracy. These results suggest that researchers should consider response latency as an indicator of inhibitory control only in children who manage to respond accurately in an inhibitory control task.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Inhibition, Psychological , Intelligence , Reaction Time , Stroop Test , Humans , Female , Male , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Longitudinal Studies , Child Development/physiology , Child, Preschool , Intelligence/physiology , Executive Function/physiology
2.
Acta Psychol (Amst) ; 235: 103892, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36966640

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to examine if prosodic patterns in oral reading derived from Recurrence Quantification Analysis (RQA) could distinguish between struggling and skilled German readers in Grades 2 (n = 67) and 4 (n = 69). Furthermore, we investigated whether models estimated with RQA measures outperformed models estimated with prosodic features derived from prosodic transcription. According to the findings, struggling second graders appear to have a slower reading rate, longer intervals between pauses, and more repetitions of recurrent amplitudes and pauses, whereas struggling fourth graders appear to have less stable pause patterns over time, more pitch repetitions, more similar amplitude patterns over time, and more repetitions of pauses. Additionally, the models with prosodic patterns outperformed models with prosodic features. These findings suggest that the RQA approach provides additional information about prosody that complements an established approach.


Subject(s)
Speech Perception , Speech , Humans , Reading , Language
3.
J Health Psychol ; 26(14): 2950-2957, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32508144

ABSTRACT

This study tested the idea that faith in intuition (people's reliance on their intuition when making judgments or decisions) is negatively associated with vaccination attitudes in the U.S. populace. Intuition is an implicit, affective information processing mode based on prior experiences. U.S. citizens have few threatening experiences with vaccines because vaccination coverage for common vaccine-preventable diseases is high in the United States. Experiences with vaccination-side effects, however, are more prevalent. This is likely to shape an intuition that favors refusal over vaccination. Results of multiple regression analyses support this supposition. With increasing faith in intuition, people's vaccination attitudes become less favorable.


Subject(s)
Intuition , Vaccines , Attitude , Cognition , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , United States , Vaccination/psychology
4.
Brain Struct Funct ; 221(2): 855-63, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25395153

ABSTRACT

Perinatal adverse experience programs social and emotional behavioral traits and is a major risk factor for the development of behavioral and psychiatric disorders. Little information is available on how adversity to the mother prior to her first pregnancy (preconception stress, PCS) may affect brain structural development, which may underlie behavioral dysfunction in the offspring. Moreover, little is known about possible sex-dependent consequences of PCS in the offspring. This study examined spine number/density and dendritic length/complexity of layer II/III pyramidal neurons in the anterior cingulate (ACd), prelimbic/infralimbic (PL/IL) and orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) of male and female rats born to mothers exposed to unpredictable variable stress at different time points prior to reproduction. Our main findings are that in line with our hypothesis adversity to the mother before her pregnancy results in highly complex changes in neuronal morphology in the medial prefrontal, but not in the orbitofrontal cortical regions of her future offspring that persist into adulthood. Moreover, our study revealed that (1) in the PCS2 group (offspring of dams mated two weeks after stress) spine numbers and dendritic length and complexity were increased in response to PCS in the ACd and PL/IL, (2) these regional effects depended on the temporal proximity of adversity and conception, (3) in the ACd of the PCS2 group only males and the left hemispheres were affected. We speculate that these transgenerational brain structural changes are mediated by stress-induced epigenetic (re)programming of future gene activity in the oocyte.


Subject(s)
Dendrites/physiology , Dendritic Spines/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Animals , Brain , Emotions , Female , Gyrus Cinguli , Male , Pregnancy , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Sex Factors , Stress, Psychological/physiopathology , Synapses/physiology
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