Literature DB >> 25690112

Inhibition of misleading heuristics as a core mechanism for typical cognitive development: evidence from behavioural and brain-imaging studies.

Grégoire Borst1, Ania Aïte, Olivier Houdé.   

Abstract

Cognitive development is generally conceived as incremental with knowledge of increasing complexity acquired throughout childhood and adolescence. However, several studies have now demonstrated not only that infants possess complex cognitive abilities but also that older children, adolescents, and adults tend to make systematic errors even in simple logical reasoning tasks. Therefore, one of the main issues for any theory of typical cognitive development is to provide an explanation of why at some age and in some contexts children, adolescents, and adults do not express a knowledge or cognitive principle that they already acquired when they were younger. In this review, we present convergent behavioural and neurocognitive evidence that cognitive development is more similar to a non-linear dynamic system than to a linear, stage-like system. In this theoretical framework, errors can emerge in problems similar to the ones infants or young children were succeeding when older children, adolescents, and adults rely on a misleading heuristic rather than on the correct logical algorithm to solve such problems. And the core mechanism for overcoming these errors is inhibitory control (i.e. the ability to inhibit the misleading heuristics). Therefore, typical cognitive development relies not only on the ability to acquire knowledge of incremental complexity but also to inhibit previously acquired knowledge.
© 2015 The Authors. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology © 2015 Mac Keith Press.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25690112     DOI: 10.1111/dmcn.12688

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Med Child Neurol        ISSN: 0012-1622            Impact factor:   5.449


  4 in total

Review 1.  The role of experience in adolescent cognitive development: Integration of executive, memory, and mesolimbic systems.

Authors:  Vishnu P Murty; Finnegan Calabro; Beatriz Luna
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2016-07-28       Impact factor: 8.989

Review 2.  Neurobehavioral Phenotype and Dysexecutive Syndrome of Preterm Children: Comorbidity or Trigger? An Update.

Authors:  Catherine Gire; Aurélie Garbi; Meriem Zahed; Any Beltran Anzola; Barthélémy Tosello; Valérie Datin-Dorrière
Journal:  Children (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-11

3.  Inhibitory control and decimal number comparison in school-aged children.

Authors:  Margot Roell; Arnaud Viarouge; Olivier Houdé; Grégoire Borst
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-11-20       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Persistence of the "Moving Things Are Alive" Heuristic into Adulthood: Evidence from EEG.

Authors:  Yannick Skelling-Desmeules; Lorie-Marlène Brault Foisy; Patrice Potvin; Hugo G Lapierre; Emmanuel Ahr; Pierre-Majorique Léger; Steve Masson; Patrick Charland
Journal:  CBE Life Sci Educ       Date:  2021-09       Impact factor: 3.325

  4 in total

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