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dc.rights.licenseopenen_US
hal.structure.identifierLaboratoire de psychologie [LabPsy]
dc.contributor.authorLUCENET, Joanna
IDREF: 179507591
dc.contributor.authorBLAYE, Agnès
dc.date.accessioned2024-02-06T10:51:03Z
dc.date.available2024-02-06T10:51:03Z
dc.date.issued2023-03-01
dc.identifier.issn1096-0457en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://oskar-bordeaux.fr/handle/20.500.12278/187891
dc.description.abstractEnThis study investigated the development of children's ability to find the optimal balance between flexibility and stability as a function of the frequency of required task switches. This question was addressed in two situations contrasting the dynamics of engagement of reconfiguration processes (reactive vs. proactive). A cued task-switching paradigm was presented to kindergartners and fourth graders, who are known to differ in their preferential mode of control engagement. Flexibility adaptation was examined through the modulation of switching costs by switch proportion, the so-called list-wide switch proportion (LWSP) effect. When the situation forced the use of reactive control (Experiment 1: simultaneous presentation of the cue and the stimulus), we found the LWSP effect with a greater magnitude in kindergartners than in fourth graders. In the situation inducing proactive control (Experiment 2: task cue presented before and until the stimulus), flexibility adaptation was obtained when error rates were considered but not response times. By demonstrating that even young children are capable of flexibility adaptation to contextual demands, these findings support the hypothesis that implicitly triggered adaptation of control may develop as early as the end of the preschool years despite the immaturity of cognitive control during this period.
dc.language.isoENen_US
dc.subject.enChild
dc.subject.enHumans
dc.subject.enChild
dc.subject.enPreschool
dc.subject.enReaction Time
dc.subject.enCues
dc.subject.enCognition
dc.subject.enPsychomotor Performance
dc.title.enContextual adaptation of cognitive flexibility in kindergartners and fourth graders.
dc.title.alternativeJ Exp Child Psycholen_US
dc.typeArticle de revueen_US
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.jecp.2022.105586en_US
dc.subject.halSciences de l'Homme et Société/Psychologie
dc.identifier.pubmed36413870en_US
bordeaux.journalJournal of Experimental Child Psychologyen_US
bordeaux.page105586en_US
bordeaux.volume227en_US
bordeaux.hal.laboratoriesLaboratoire de psychologie (LabPsy) - UR 4139en_US
bordeaux.institutionUniversité de Bordeauxen_US
bordeaux.peerReviewedouien_US
bordeaux.inpressnonen_US
bordeaux.import.sourcepubmed
hal.identifierhal-04565902
hal.version2
hal.date.transferred2024-05-02T23:04:02Z
hal.popularnonen_US
hal.audienceInternationaleen_US
hal.exporttrue
workflow.import.sourcepubmed
dc.rights.ccPas de Licence CCen_US
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