Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
Overview
Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience is a scholarly journal that focuses on the interdisciplinary study of brain development and cognitive processes in children and adolescents. It publishes cutting-edge research articles, reviews, and commentaries, providing valuable insights into the neural mechanisms underlying cognitive development and its implications for education, psychology, and neuroscience.
Details
Details
Abbr.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
Publisher
Elsevier
Start
2011
End
Continuing
Frequency
Four no. per year
p-ISSN
1878-9293
e-ISSN
1878-9307
Country
Netherlands
Language
English
Specialties
Neurology
Psychiatry
Psychiatry
Metrics
Metrics
h-index / Ranks: 3865
87
SJR / Ranks: 1425
1804
CiteScore / Ranks: 2106
8.30
JIF / Ranks: 1761
4.7
Recent Articles
1.
Szwed M, de Jesus A, Kossowski B, Ahmadi H, Rutkowska E, Mysak Y, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
73:101538.
PMID: 40086410
Air pollution affects human health and may disrupt brain maturation, including axon myelination, critical for efficient neural signaling. Here, we assess the impact of prenatal and current long-term particulate matter...
2.
Calabro F, LeCroy D, Foran W, Sydnor V, Parr A, Constantinidis C, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
73:101541.
PMID: 40086409
Adolescence is a key period for the maturation of cognitive control during which cortical circuitry is refined through processes such as synaptic pruning, but how these refinements modulate local functional...
3.
Kardan O, Jones N, Wheelock M, Angstadt M, Michael C, Molloy M, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
73:101543.
PMID: 40080996
Adolescence is a period of growth in cognitive performance and functioning. Recently, data-driven measures of brain-age gap, which can index cognitive decline in older populations, have been utilized in adolescent...
4.
Abdulrasul H, Brice H, Jasinska K
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
73:101532.
PMID: 40073667
This study investigated the neurodevelopmental impacts of displacement on resettled Syrian refugee children in Canada, focusing on how the timing and duration of adversity experienced during displacement influence neural network...
5.
Olson H, Camacho M, Abdurokhmonova G, Ahmad S, Chen E, Chung H, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
73:101539.
PMID: 40056738
As scientists interested in fetal, infant, and toddler (FIT) neurodevelopment, our research questions often focus on how individual children differ in their neurodevelopment and the predictive value of those individual...
6.
Garic D, Al-Ali K, Nasir A, Azrak O, Grzadzinski R, McKinstry R, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
73:101540.
PMID: 40043413
Down syndrome (DS) is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability, but our understanding of white matter microstructure in children with DS remains limited. Previous studies have reported reductions...
7.
Poortman S, Jamarik J, Ten Harmsen van der Beek L, Setiaman N, Hillegers M, Barendse M, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
72:101536.
PMID: 40031140
Offspring of parents with severe mental illness are at increased risk of developing psychopathology. Identifying endophenotypic markers in high-familial-risk individuals can aid in early detection and inform development of prevention...
8.
Armstrong-Carter E, Kwon S, Jorgensen N, Prinstein M, Lindquist K, Telzer E
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
72:101530.
PMID: 40022941
This longitudinal, preregistered study investigated the hypothesis that adolescents who are raised in socioeconomic adversity engage in relatively more health-compromising risk-taking behavior during years when they show relatively heightened anticipation...
9.
Ferguson A, Nishino T, Girault J, Hazlett H, Schultz R, Marrus N, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Mar;
72:101534.
PMID: 40022940
Mass univariate testing on functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI) data is limited by difficulties achieving experiment-wide significance. Recent work addressing this problem has used enrichment analysis, which aggregates univariate screening statistics...
10.
Wang R, Fang T, Zhang Y, Cheng Y, Wang C, Chen Y, et al.
Dev Cogn Neurosci
. 2025 Feb;
72:101535.
PMID: 40020404
Although the rapid growth of brain structure and function during infancy has been well documented, relatively little is known about how these two developmental processes couple-an aspect that exhibits distinct...