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Direct touches to clear barriers: Developmental sensitivity of a new measure of the production of ineffective responses in infancy
Authors:Julia S. Noland  Nikita P. Rodrigues
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt Kennedy Center , Vanderbilt University , Nashville , Tennessee , USA julia.noland@vanderbilt.edu;3. Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt Kennedy Center , Vanderbilt University , Nashville , Tennessee , USA
Abstract:Current interpretation of the object retrieval task (Diamond, 1990 Diamond, A. 1990. The Development and the Neural Bases of Higher Cortical Functions, New York, NY: New York Academy of Sciences.  [Google Scholar]) as an infant assessment of response inhibition requires evidence that younger infants make more ineffective attempts to retrieve toys through clear barriers. On two 30-second trials, infants (9 or 11 months of age) saw an inaccessible toy in the front or back of a clear box. The location of the infants touches corresponded with the toy's location and, on the second trial, the younger infants touched the box more. In previous research nonhuman primates with orbital-frontal, but not dorsa-lateral, lesions also made ineffective barrier touches. The current developmental decreases in barrier touches may selectively tap developmental increases in inhibitory control supported by the developing orbital-frontal cortex.
Keywords:Infant  Executive functioning  Response inhibition  Orbital-frontal  Barrier
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