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Freeze-Frame: a new infant inhibition task and its relation to frontal cortex tasks during infancy and early childhood
Authors:Holmboe Karla  Pasco Fearon R M  Csibra Gergely  Tucker Leslie A  Johnson Mark H
Affiliation:Centre for Brain and Cognitive Development, School of Psychology, Birkbeck College, University of London, London WC1E 7HX, UK. k.holmboe@psychology.bbk.ac.uk
Abstract:The current study investigated a new, easily administered, visual inhibition task for infants termed the Freeze-Frame task. In the new task, 9-month-olds were encouraged to inhibit looks to peripheral distractors. This was done by briefly freezing a central animated stimulus when infants looked to the distractors. Half of the trials presented an engaging central stimulus, and the other half presented a repetitive central stimulus. Three measures of inhibitory function were derived from the task and compared with performance on a set of frontal cortex tasks administered at 9 and 24 months of age. As expected, infants' ability to learn to selectively inhibit looks to the distractors at 9 months predicted performance at 24 months. However, performance differences in the two Freeze-Frame trial types early in the experiment also turned out to be an important predictor. The results are discussed in terms of the validity of the Freeze-Frame task as an early measure of different components of inhibitory function.
Keywords:Infancy   Early childhood   Inhibition   Frontal cortex   Longitudinal research
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