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Applying cognitive training to target executive functions during early development
Authors:Sam V. Wass
Affiliation:1. Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UKsam.wass@mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk
Abstract:Developmental psychopathology is increasingly recognizing the importance of distinguishing causal processes (i.e., the mechanisms that cause a disease) from developmental outcomes (i.e., the symptoms of the disorder as it is eventually diagnosed). Targeting causal processes early in disordered development may be more effective than waiting until outcomes are established and then trying to reverse the pathogenic process. In this review, I evaluate evidence suggesting that neural and behavioral plasticity may be greatest at very early stages of development. I also describe correlational evidence suggesting that, across a number of conditions, early emerging individual differences in attentional control and working memory may play a role in mediating later-developing differences in academic and other forms of learning. I review the currently small number of studies that applied direct and indirect cognitive training targeted at young individuals and discuss methodological challenges associated with targeting this age group. I also discuss a number of ways in which early, targeted cognitive training may be used to help us understand the developmental mechanisms subserving typical and atypical cognitive development.
Keywords:Cognitive training  Attentional control  Working memory  Infant  Toddler  Early intervention  At-risk  Preventative intervention
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