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1.
Child Dev ; 2024 Feb 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38334228

RESUMO

This research investigated children's and adults' understanding of the mind by assessing beliefs about the temporal features of mental states. English-speaking North American participants, varying in socioeconomic status (Study 1: N = 50 adults; Study 2: N = 112, 8- to 10-year-olds and adults; and Study 3: N = 116, 5- to 7-year-olds and adults; tested 2017-2022), estimated the duration (seconds to a lifetime) of emotions, desires (wanting), preferences (liking), and control trials (e.g., napping and having eyes). Participants were 56% female and 44% male; 32% Asian, 1% Black, 13% Hispanic/Latino, 38% White (non-Hispanic/Latino), and 16% multiracial or another race/ethnicity. Children and adults judged that preferences last longer than emotions and desires, with age differences in distinguishing specific emotions by duration ( η p 2 s > .03 $$ {\eta}_{\mathrm{p}}^2\mathrm{s}>.03 $$ ). By 5 to 7 years, ideas about the mind include consideration of time.

2.
Dev Psychol ; 58(4): 693-699, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35343716

RESUMO

The current study examined the influence of guilt on young children's honesty about their transgression. Children (N = 192; 4-6 years of age; 49.5% male, 50.5% female; middle-income Chinese families) participated in a modified temptation resistance paradigm where they were asked not to peek at a toy in the absence of an experimenter. Next, the children were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 conditions: (a) guilt condition, where children were induced with guilt using a revised mishap paradigm; (b) sadness condition, where children were induced with sadness by watching a video; and (c) baseline condition, where children did not participate in any additional emotion-inducing task. When later questioned about whether they peeked at the toy, children in the guilt condition were significantly less likely to lie compared with those in the sadness or baseline conditions. There was no significant difference between the sadness and baseline conditions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Comportamento Infantil , Enganação , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Culpa , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Motivação
3.
Emotion ; 22(5): 880-893, 2022 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32686946

RESUMO

We measured judgments about emotions across time. In Study 1 (N = 254) and Study 2 (N = 162), LGBTQ-Latinx, straight-Latinx, LGBTQ-White, and straight-White emerging adults rated how they would feel if a perpetrator acted positively (P) or negatively (N) toward them in single, isolated events. In Study 2, participants also responded to a new emotions across time task where they judged how they would feel interacting with a hypothetical perpetrator across three timepoints: (1) an initial past event, (2) a recent past event, and (3) an uncertain future-oriented event (e.g., seeing the perpetrator again). Participants further predicted their thoughts and decisions in the uncertain future-oriented event. The past emotional events appeared in various sequences (PP, NN, NP, PN). Results indicated that participants judged events as emotionally unambiguous when occurring first in a sequence or in isolation (positive events feel better than negative events). In contrast, initial events shaped emotional reactions to subsequent events: Participants responded more intensely to episodes that were preceded by events of the same valence. In addition to this augmenting effect, initial negative events were especially sticky: Participants rated a positive event following a negative event as feeling less good than when a positive event appeared first or in isolation, but they judged negative events to feel equivalently bad regardless of order. When evaluating future-oriented affective states, participants drew from the prior experiences and prioritized the recent past (more positive emotions, thoughts, and decisions for PP > NP > PN > NN). Effects replicated across all social groups. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Emoções , Julgamento , Adulto , Humanos
4.
Dev Psychol ; 57(5): 702-717, 2021 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34166016

RESUMO

We examined the influence of prior expectations on 4- to 10-year-olds' and adults' preferences and emotions following an undesirable outcome (N = 205; 49% female, 51% male; 6% Asian, 1% Black, 13% Hispanic/Latino [non-White], 57% White, 18% multiracial, and 5% another race/ethnicity; 75% with a college-educated parent). Participants attempted to win a chance game with multiple prizes; the worst prize being a pencil. The game was rigged so that half of the participants lost, and the other half won. Regardless of the game outcome, everyone received a pencil. For winning participants (high-expectation condition), the pencil was worse than the prize they expected; whereas for losing participants (low-expectation condition), the pencil was better than the "nothing" they expected. Participants rated how much they liked and felt about the pencil preoutcome, postoutcome, when imagining having held an alternative prior expectation, and after learning that everyone received a pencil. Results showed that 6- to 10-year-olds and adults with low (vs. high) expectations liked the pencil more, with emotion ratings trending in the same direction. Prior expectations did not influence younger children's affective experiences. More participants with low (vs. high) expectations also expressed a positive outlook about the pencil, which increased with age and correlated with higher postoutcome emotions. More adults than children explained emotions as caused by thoughts, and only adults consistently reasoned that their preferences and emotions would have differed had they held alternative prior expectations. Once knowing that everyone received a pencil, 6- to 10-year-olds and adults liked the pencil more and felt better. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Emoções , Motivação , Adulto , Criança , Desenvolvimento Infantil , Feminino , Hispânico ou Latino , Humanos , Masculino , População Branca
5.
Cogn Dev ; 572021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33642677

RESUMO

We examined developmental differences and sources of variability in trait reasoning. Four- to 10-year-olds and adults (N=198) rated how mean or nice "medium-mean" and "medium-nice" babies, kids, and teenagers were earlier in their lifetime and would be at older ages. Participants expected nice-labeled characters to be nice throughout their lives (participant age effects were null). In contrast, we documented age-related differences in judgments about meanness. With increasing participant age, individuals expected that meanness present in infancy, childhood, and adolescence would persist into adulthood. We discovered a curvilinear pattern in assessments of whether meanness originates during infancy: Four- to 5-year-olds and adults expected mean-labeled kids and teenagers to have been nicer as babies than did 6- to 10-year-olds. Controlling for age and working memory, participants with better inhibitory control more frequently expected mean-labeled individuals to remain mean across the lifespan, but inhibitory control was unrelated to judgments about nice-labeled individuals.

6.
Emotion ; 21(1): 1-16, 2021 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31682142

RESUMO

We examined an advanced form of emotion understanding in 4- to 10-year-olds and adults (N = 264): Awareness that people's minds generalize from past emotional episodes to bias how they feel, think, and make decisions in new situations. Participants viewed scenarios on an eye tracker, each featuring an initial perpetrator who caused a character to feel positively (P) and/or negatively (N) in 2-event sequences (NN, PP, NP, PN). Later, the character encountered a new agent who was highly similar to the initial perpetrator. Participants predicted the character's affective reactions (emotions, thoughts, decisions) to the unknown agent while we recorded their eye movements to past episodes. Participants also judged characters' emotions upon seeing additional agents, who differed in degree of similarity to the initial perpetrator. Four- to 5-year-olds discounted pasts with initial perpetrators-believing instead that characters would feel happy, anticipate good, and approach new agents. In contrast, adults exhibited robust beliefs that people generalize from past emotional experiences: They attributed more positive responses to new agents following PP > NP > PN > NN pasts, and they expected characters to have biased emotional reactions to even somewhat dissimilar new agents. Between 6 and 10 years, children increasingly assumed that the past would have a biasing impact; however, they drew stricter boundaries than did adults. Eye-tracking analyses revealed that all age groups attended to characters' emotional past histories when reasoning about reactions to new agents (especially negative events), adults prioritized recent negative events in PN pasts, and participants' attention biases to past event information correlated with their reasoning about emotion generalization. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Emoções/fisiologia , Conhecimento , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Compreensão , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
7.
Child Dev ; 91(4): 1116-1134, 2020 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31418461

RESUMO

Two studies investigated 5- to 10-year-olds' (N = 194) positivity bias when forecasting the future. Children from two geographic locations (mostly Caucasian, higher income college town; mostly African American, lower income urban community) completed a future expectations task (FET). For multiple scenarios, children predicted whether a positive versus negative (optimism items) or a positive versus extraordinary positive (wishful thinking items) outcome would occur, including its likelihood. In both samples, optimism and wishful thinking decreased with age, optimism was higher than wishful thinking, children did not show a comparative self-optimism bias, and individual differences in the FET optimism score correlated with self-reported dispositional optimism and hope. Exploratory comparisons revealed between-sample equivalence in responses to all measures, except for less tempered wishful thinking in the urban community.


Assuntos
Negro ou Afro-Americano/etnologia , Individualidade , Otimismo , Fatores Socioeconômicos , População Branca/etnologia , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Estados Unidos/etnologia
8.
Child Dev ; 90(4): 1170-1184, 2019 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29171005

RESUMO

Four- to 10-year-olds and adults (N = 205) responded to vignettes involving three individuals with different expectations (high, low, and no) for a future event. Participants judged characters' pre-outcome emotions, as well as predicted and explained their feelings following three events (positive, attenuated, and negative). Although adults rated high-expectation characters more negatively than low-expectation characters after all outcomes, children shared this intuition starting at 6-7 years for negative outcomes, 8-10 years for attenuated, and never for positive. Comparison to baseline (no expectation) indicated that understanding the costs of high expectations emerges first and remains more robust across age than recognition that low expectations carry benefits. Explanation analyses further clarified this developing awareness about the relation between thoughts and emotions over time.


Assuntos
Compreensão , Motivação , Psicologia da Criança , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Emoções , Feminino , Humanos , Intuição , Masculino , Análise Multivariada , Adulto Jovem
9.
Psychol Sci ; 28(11): 1597-1609, 2017 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28968175

RESUMO

Using generic language to describe groups (applying characteristics to entire categories) is ubiquitous and affects how children and adults categorize other people. Five-year-olds, 8-year-olds, and adults ( N = 190) learned about a novel social group that separated into two factions (citizens and noncitizens). Noncitizens were described in either generic or specific language. Later, the children and adults categorized individuals in two contexts: criminal (individuals labeled as noncitizens faced jail and deportation) and noncriminal (labeling had no consequences). Language genericity influenced decision making. Participants in the specific-language condition, but not those in the generic-language condition, reduced the rate at which they identified potential noncitizens when their judgments resulted in criminal penalties compared with when their judgments had no consequences. In addition, learning about noncitizens in specific language (vs. generic language) increased the amount of matching evidence participants needed to identify potential noncitizens (preponderance standard) and decreased participants' certainty in their judgments. Thus, generic language encourages children and adults to categorize individuals using a lower evidentiary standard regardless of negative consequences for presumed social-group membership.


Assuntos
Formação de Conceito/fisiologia , Tomada de Decisões/fisiologia , Idioma , Percepção Social , Adulto , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Criminosos , Humanos , Adulto Jovem
10.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 146(1): 89-101, 2017 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28054815

RESUMO

We used eye tracking to examine 4- to 10-year-olds' and adults' (N = 173) visual attention to negative (anger, fear, sadness, disgust) and neutral faces when paired with happy faces in 2 experimental conditions: free-viewing ("look at the faces") and directed ("look only at the happy faces"). Regardless of instruction, all age groups more often looked first to negative versus positive faces (no age differences), suggesting that initial orienting is driven by bottom-up processes. In contrast, biases in more sustained attention-last looks and looking duration-varied by age and could be modified by top-down instruction. On the free-viewing task, all age groups exhibited a negativity bias which attenuated with age and remained stable across trials. When told to look only at happy faces (directed task), all age groups shifted to a positivity bias, with linear age-related improvements. This ability to implement the "look only at the happy faces" instruction, however, fatigued over time, with the decrement stronger for children. Controlling for age, individual differences in executive function (working memory and inhibitory control) had no relation to the free-viewing task; however, these variables explained substantial variance on the directed task, with children and adults higher in executive function showing better skill at looking last and looking longer at happy faces. Greater anxiety predicted more first looks to angry faces on the directed task. These findings advance theory and research on normative development and individual differences in the bias to prioritize negative information, including contributions of bottom-up salience and top-down control. (PsycINFO Database Record


Assuntos
Atenção , Emoções , Expressão Facial , Reconhecimento Facial , Psicologia da Criança , Adulto , Ira , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Função Executiva , Movimentos Oculares , Feminino , Felicidade , Humanos , Individualidade , Masculino , Memória de Curto Prazo , Adulto Jovem
11.
Child Dev ; 88(5): 1554-1562, 2017 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27982414

RESUMO

We explored children's and adults' ability to disengage from current physiological states when forecasting future desires. In Study 1, 8- to 13-year-olds and adults (N = 104) ate pretzels (to induce thirst) and then predicted and explained what they would want tomorrow, pretzels or water. Demonstrating life-span continuity, approximately 70% of participants, regardless of age, chose water and referenced current thirst as their rationale. Individual differences in working memory and undergraduate grade point average were positively related to performance on the pretzel task. In Study 2, we obtained baseline preferences from adults (N = 35) and confirmed that, prior to consuming pretzels, people do not anticipate wanting water more than pretzels the next day. Together, these findings indicate that both children and adults are tethered to the present when forecasting their future desires.


Assuntos
Antecipação Psicológica/fisiologia , Desenvolvimento Infantil/fisiologia , Tomada de Decisões/fisiologia , Memória de Curto Prazo/fisiologia , Sede/fisiologia , Desempenho Acadêmico , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Feminino , Alimentos , Humanos , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
12.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 149: 116-133, 2016 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27017060

RESUMO

The current study examined 4- to 10-year-olds' and adults' (N=280) tendency to connect people's thoughts, emotions, and decisions into valence-matched mental state triads (thought valence=emotion valence=decision valence; e.g., anticipate something bad+feel worried+avoid) and valence-matched mental state dyads (thought-emotion, thought-decision, and emotion-decision). Participants heard vignettes about focal characters who re-encountered individuals who had previously harmed them twice, helped them twice, or both harmed and helped them. Baseline trials involved no past experience. Children and adults predicted the focal characters' thoughts (anticipate something good or bad), emotions (feel happy or worried), and decisions (go near or stay away). Results showed significant increases between 4 and 10years of age in the formation of valence-matched mental state triads and dyads, with thoughts and emotions most often aligned by valence. We also documented age-related improvement in awareness that uncertain situations elicit less valence-consistent mental states than more certain situations, with females expecting weaker coherence among characters' thoughts, emotions, and decisions than males. Controlling for age and sex, individuals with stronger executive function (working memory and inhibitory control) predicted more valence-aligned mental states. These findings add to the emerging literature on development and individual differences in children's reasoning about mental states and emotions during middle childhood and beyond.


Assuntos
Emoções/fisiologia , Teoria da Mente , Pensamento/fisiologia , Ansiedade , Conscientização/fisiologia , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Função Executiva/fisiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Individualidade , Masculino , Testes Psicológicos , Caracteres Sexuais , Adulto Jovem
13.
Adv Child Dev Behav ; 48: 185-217, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25735945

RESUMO

Research on the development of theory of mind (ToM), the understanding of people in relation to mental states and emotions, has been a vibrant area of cognitive development research. Because the dominant focus has been addressing when children acquire a ToM, researchers have concentrated their efforts on studying the emergence of psychological understanding during infancy and early childhood. Here, the benchmark test has been the false-belief task, the awareness that the mind can misrepresent reality. While understanding false belief is a critical milestone achieved by the age of 4 or 5, children make further advances in their knowledge about mental states and emotions during middle childhood and beyond. Thus, a comprehensive understanding of children's sociocognitive abilities in older age groups is necessary to understand more fully the course of ToM development. The aim of this review is to outline continued development in ToM during middle childhood. In particular, we focus on children's understanding of interpretation-that different minds can construct different interpretations of the same reality. Additionally, we consider children's growing understanding of how mental states (thoughts, emotions, decisions) derive from personal experiences, cohere across time, and interconnect (e.g., thoughts shape emotions). We close with a discussion of the surprising paucity of studies investigating individual differences in ToM beyond age 6. Our hope is that this chapter will invigorate empirical interest in moving the pendulum toward the opposite research direction-toward exploring strengths, limitations, variability, and persistent errors in developing theories of mind across the life span.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento Infantil , Emoções , Percepção Social , Teoria da Mente , Criança , Função Executiva , Humanos , Individualidade
14.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 132: 121-39, 2015 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25687549

RESUMO

Prior investigations of relations between sibling composition and theory of mind have focused almost exclusively on false belief understanding in children 6 years of age and younger. The current work expands previous research by examining whether sibling composition predicts 4- to 11-year-olds' (N=192) more advanced mental state reasoning on interpretive theory of mind tasks. Even when controlling for age and executive function, children with a greater number of older siblings or with more same-sex siblings demonstrated stronger knowledge in both their predictions and explanations that people with different past experiences can have diverse interpretations of ambiguous stimuli. These data provide some of the first documentation of sibling constellations that predict individual differences in theory of mind during middle childhood.


Assuntos
Função Executiva/fisiologia , Individualidade , Irmãos/psicologia , Teoria da Mente/fisiologia , Pensamento/fisiologia , Criança , Desenvolvimento Infantil , Pré-Escolar , Cognição , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino
15.
Emotion ; 15(1): 61-72, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25286069

RESUMO

This study compared the relative difficulty of the happy-sad inhibitory control task (say "happy" for the sad face and "sad" for the happy face) against other card tasks that varied by the presence and type (focal vs. peripheral; negative vs. positive) of emotional information in a sample of 4- to 11-year-olds and adults (N = 264). Participants also completed parallel "name games" (direct labeling). All age groups made more errors and took longer to respond to happy-sad compared to other versions, and the relative difficulty of happy-sad increased with age. The happy-sad name game even posed a greater challenge than some opposite games. These data provide insight into the impact of emotions on cognitive processing across a wide age range.


Assuntos
Emoções , Felicidade , Inibição Psicológica , Adulto , Envelhecimento/psicologia , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Cognição/fisiologia , Função Executiva/fisiologia , Expressão Facial , Feminino , Jogos Experimentais , Humanos , Masculino , Nomes , Estimulação Luminosa , Desempenho Psicomotor/fisiologia , Caracteres Sexuais , Fala/fisiologia
16.
Child Dev ; 85(5): 2011-28, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24611809

RESUMO

Children ages 5-13 years (N = 82) responded to prosocial and prohibitive moral dilemmas featuring characters whose desires conflicted with another person's need for help or ownership rights. The gender of the characters matched for half the trials (in-group version) and mismatched for the other half (out-group version). Both boys and girls judged that people would more likely help and not harm the gender in-group versus out-group. Only girls exhibited gender bias in emotion attributions, expecting girls to feel happier helping girls and better ignoring the needs of boys. With increasing age, children exhibited greater awareness of the emotional benefits of prosocial sacrifice and made stronger distinctions by need level when evaluating prosocial decisions, obligations, and permissibility.


Assuntos
Desenvolvimento Infantil/fisiologia , Identidade de Gênero , Julgamento/fisiologia , Princípios Morais , Comportamento Social , Adolescente , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Fatores Sexuais , Teoria da Mente/fisiologia
17.
Child Dev ; 84(6): 2094-111, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23480128

RESUMO

Four- to 10-year-olds and adults (N = 265) responded to eight scenarios presented on an eye tracker. Each trial involved a character who encounters a perpetrator who had previously enacted positive (P), negative (N), or both types of actions toward him or her in varying sequences (NN, PP, PN, and NP). Participants predicted the character's thoughts about the likelihood of future events, emotion type and intensity, and decision to approach or avoid. All ages made more positive forecasts for PP > NP > PN > NN trials, with differentiation by past experience widening with age. Age-related increases in weighting the most recent past event also appeared in eye gaze. Individual differences in biased visual attention correlated with verbal judgments. Findings contribute to research on risk assessment, person perception, and heuristics in judgment and decision making.


Assuntos
Atenção/fisiologia , Relações Interpessoais , Julgamento , Percepção do Tempo/fisiologia , Adulto , Análise de Variância , Antecipação Psicológica , Tomada de Decisões/fisiologia , Emoções/fisiologia , Medições dos Movimentos Oculares , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pensamento/fisiologia
18.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 113(2): 211-32, 2012 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22727673

RESUMO

Three studies assessed parent-child agreement in perceptions of children's everyday emotions in typically developing 4- to 11-year-old children. Study 1 (N=228) and Study 2 (N=195) focused on children's worry and anxiety. Study 3 (N=90) examined children's optimism. Despite child and parent reporters providing internally consistent responses, their perceptions about children's emotional wellbeing consistently failed to correlate. Parents significantly underestimated child worry and anxiety and overestimated optimism compared to child self-report (suggesting a parental positivity bias). Moreover, parents' self-reported emotions correlated with how they reported their children's emotions (suggesting an egocentric bias). These findings have implications for developmental researchers, clinicians, and parents.


Assuntos
Emoções , Pais , Testes Psicológicos , Autorrelato , Percepção Social , Fatores Etários , Ansiedade/diagnóstico , Viés , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Relações Pais-Filho , Psicometria , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Estresse Psicológico/diagnóstico , Estados Unidos
19.
Child Dev ; 83(2): 667-82, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22187976

RESUMO

Five- to 10-year-olds (N = 90) listened to 6 illustrated scenarios featuring 2 characters that jointly experience the same positive event (and feel good), negative event (and feel bad), or ambiguous event (and feel okay). Afterward, one character thinks a positive thought and the other thinks a negative thought. Children predicted and explained each character's emotions. Results showed significant development between 5 and 10 years in children's understanding that thinking positively improves emotions and thinking negatively makes one feel worse, with earliest knowledge demonstrated when reasoning about ambiguous and positive events. Individual differences in child and parental optimism and hope predicted children's knowledge about thought-emotion connections on some measures, including their beliefs about the emotional benefits of thinking positively in negative situations.


Assuntos
Afeto , Atitude , Caráter , Motivação , Pensamento , Fatores Etários , Aprendizagem por Associação , Conscientização , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Emoções , Feminino , Humanos , Individualidade , Julgamento , Masculino , Determinação da Personalidade , Resolução de Problemas
20.
Dev Sci ; 14(3): 481-9, 2011 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21477188

RESUMO

Two experiments examined 4- to 11-year-olds' and adults' performance (N = 350) on two variants of a Stroop-like card task: the day-night task (say 'day' when shown a moon and 'night' when shown a sun) and a new happy-sad task (say 'happy' for a sad face and 'sad' for a happy face). Experiment 1 featured colored cartoon drawings. In Experiment 2, the happy-sad task featured photographs, and pictures for both measures were gray scale. All age groups made more errors and took longer to respond to the happy-sad versus the day-night versions. Unlike the day-night task, the happy-sad task did not suffer from ceiling effects, even in adults. The happy-sad task provides a methodological advance for measuring executive function across a wide age range.


Assuntos
Função Executiva/fisiologia , Percepção/fisiologia , Teste de Stroop , Adolescente , Adulto , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Tempo de Reação
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