Childhood: Developmental Psychology – Article overview (UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM)
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Executive function (EF) refers to the psychological processes involved in the conscious control of thought and action. However, there are several possible definitions:
It may be that executive function consists of separable but related constructs. It seems to consist of inhibition of prepotent responses (1), shifting between mental sets (i.e. flexibility) (2) and updating and monitoring of representations in working memory (3). However, by conducting a task which is aimed at a single construct of EF, it is unclear whether it taps into multiple component processes (e.g. does flexibility rely on inhibitory control or are they separate constructs).
Executive function has several developmental characteristics:
Luria states that the prefrontal cortex consists of interactive functional systems which involve the integration of subsystems. The subsystems have specific roles but cannot be considered outside of the larger systems. This means that executive function may be a function and not a mechanism or cognitive structure. Functions refer to behavioural constructs defined in terms of their outcome (e.g. what they accomplish). It is possible to organize functionally distinct phases around the constant outcome of solving a problem (i.e. the outcome of EF).
Intending refers to keeping a plan in mind to control behaviour. Rule use refers to translating a plan into action. After acting, evaluation occurs and this includes error detection and error correction. Representational inflexibility refers to the inability to form a new plan. Lack of response control refers to the inability to carry out a new plan.
Executive function draws on the prefrontal cortex but it is not the same. Damage to the PFC does not necessarily mean executive function impairment. The prefrontal cortex includes the orbitofrontal cortex (1), dorsomedial cortex (2), ventrolateral cortex (3), dorsolateral cortex (4) and rostrolateral prefrontal cortices (5).
The lateral prefrontal cortex may play an important role in the integration of sensory and mnemonic information and the regulation of intellectual function and action. It is connected to the thalamus (1), parts of the basal ganglia (2) , the hippocampus (3) and primary and secondary association areas of neocortex (4). Dopamine may play an important role in the lateral prefrontal cortex.
The ventral and medial prefrontal cortex consists of ventral and medial regions of prefrontal cortex. It has strong connections to the amygdala and other parts of the limbic system. It is well suited for the integration of affective and non-affective information and for the regulation of appetitive and motivated behaviour.
It was first believed that PFC was not functional during childhood but this idea has been refuted. The consequences of PFC lesions in children are less noticeable than in adults. Behavioural impairments as a result of PFC lesions may occur later in development when late-developing functions would normally appear. Identical lesions can have different consequences at different ages.
The development of PFC follows increases in head circumference (1), interhemispheric connectivity (2), myelination (3), synaptic density (4), cortical thickness (5) and scalp electrical activity (6). There are several trends in the development of PFC:
Perseveration refers to continuing with behaviour that should have been inhibited and this characterizes a lot of failures of executive function. Executive function that only depends on an inhibition mechanism is problematic for several reasons:
Interference control refers to the suppression of interference due to stimulus competition. Behavioural inhibition refers to the suppression of a prepotent response. Inhibition may be necessary but not sufficient for executive function.
It is also possible that changes in executive function are the result of changes to the capacity of working memory. This theory holds that development of executive function is the result of increases in the strength of active memory representations. This allows children to override prepotent tendencies mediated by latent memory traces. Executive function may also require both working memory and inhibition.
The cognitive complexity and control theory states that age-related changes in executive function are the result of increases in the hierarchical complexity of the rules that children can formulate, maintain in working memory and use when solving problems. This thus holds that children’s plans correspond literally to rules. Over the course of development, this rule system then gets more complex. Lateral PFC-mediated reprocessing allows reflecting on simple rules and formulate higher-order rules that control the application of the simpler rules. This theory requires the ability to engage in reflection. This typically develops during preschool years.
Basic limbic system functions can be described as the four F’s (i.e. feeding; fleeing; fighting; sexual activity). Cool EF is elicited by abstract, decontextualized problems. Hot EF is required for problems that are characterized by high affective involvement or demand flexible appraisals of the affective significance of stimuli. The somatic marker theory states that the orbitofrontal cortex is required for processing learned associations between affective reactions and specific scenarios (e.g. losing with gambling should elicit a negative feeling). Hot EF appears to develop over the preschool period.
Decision making is normally biased in an adaptive fashion by physiological reactions that predict rewards and punishment (i.e. combining hot and cool functions of EF). On the other hand, it may also be useful to reconceptualize affective problems in a neutral, decontextualized term. As hot and cool EF work together, it is not possible to clearly differentiate between them in a task.
In the problem solving framework, executive function is believed to proceed from problem representation (1) to planning (2) to execution (3) to evaluation (4). Inflexibility can occur at each of these stages:
It is likely that the phases of the problem-solving framework develop together. If task difficulty is equal, hot tasks of EF may be more difficult than cool tasks of EF. There seems to be a strong relation between cool EF and theory of mind. This does not fit with other theories of ToM.
Difficulties with executive function are prominent in a lot of disorders with childhood onset (e.g. autism; conduct disorder; OCD; ADHD).
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