The Development of Inhibitory Control in Preschool Children: Effects of "executive Skills" Training
Overview
Psychiatry
Psychology
Authors
Affiliations
As one of several processes involved in the executive functioning of the cognitive system, inhibitory control plays a significant role in determining how various mental processes work together in the successful performance of a task. Studies of response inhibition have shown that although 3-year-old children have the cognitive capacity to learn the rules required for response control, indicated by the correct verbal response, developmental constraints prevent them from withholding the correct response (Bell & Livesey, 1985; Livesey & Morgan, 1991). Some argue that these abulic dissociations are relative to children's ability to reflect on the rules required for response control (Zelazo, Reznick, & Pinon, 1995). The current study showed that repeated exposure to tasks facilitating the acquisition of increasingly complex rule structures could improve inhibitory control (as measured by a go/no-go discrimination learning task), even in children aged 3 years. These tasks included a variant of Diamond and Boyer's (1989) modified version of the Wisconsin Card Sort Task and a simplification of the change paradigm (Logan & Burkell, 1986). It is argued that experience with these tasks increased the acquisition of complex rules by placing demands on executive processes. This includes response control and other executive functions, such as representational flexibility, the ability to maintain information in working memory, the selective control of attention, and proficiency at error correction. The role of experiential variables in the development of inhibitory control is discussed in terms of the interaction between neural development and appropriate executive task experience in the early years.
Canli U, Gut A, Sevinc S, Deveci M, Sendil A, Yaman G BMC Pediatr. 2025; 25(1):153.
PMID: 40022081 PMC: 11869643. DOI: 10.1186/s12887-025-05475-1.
Kang D, Zhang Y, Xu X, Li J Front Psychol. 2025; 16:1513033.
PMID: 39950069 PMC: 11822772. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1513033.
Pollak R, Sefik E, Aberizk K, Duan K, Espana R, Guest R Psychol Med. 2024; :1-12.
PMID: 39365000 PMC: 11578917. DOI: 10.1017/S0033291724002320.
Early environments and exploration in the preschool years.
Bass I, Bonawitz E PLoS One. 2024; 19(6):e0305353.
PMID: 38857256 PMC: 11164363. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0305353.
Huffhines L, Parade S, Martin S, Gottipaty A, Kavanaugh B, Spirito A Dev Psychopathol. 2024; :1-17.
PMID: 38711378 PMC: 11540980. DOI: 10.1017/S0954579424000956.