Development of relational processing in hot and cool tasks.

Dev Neuropsychol

Applied Cognitive Neuroscience Research Unit, Behavioural Basis of Health Program, Griffith Health Institute, Australia.

Published: June 2012

The research investigated the role of complexity and the hot-cool distinction in cognitive development. The 120, 3- to 6-year-old children completed four hot tasks, which involved an affective component and three cool tasks, which did not. All tasks included binary- and ternary-relational items. Complexity was a major source of difficulty on all tasks, especially for younger children. Consistent with a hot-cool distinction, ternary-relational processing emerged earlier and more 4- and 5-year-olds mastered ternary-relational items in hot than cool tasks. Overall performance was better in hot than cool tasks at 4 years but this pattern was reversed at 6 years.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/87565641.2011.632457DOI Listing

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