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Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development

Adaptive cognitive control (CC), the ability to adjust goal-directed behavior according to changing environmental demand, can be instantiated bottom-up by implicit knowledge, including temporal predictability of task-relevant events. In S1-S2 tasks, either local (trial-by-trial hazard expectation) o...

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Autores principales: Del Popolo Cristaldi, Fiorella, Toffoli, Lisa, Duma, Gian Marco, Mento, Giovanni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9955637/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36827315
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0281417
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author Del Popolo Cristaldi, Fiorella
Toffoli, Lisa
Duma, Gian Marco
Mento, Giovanni
author_facet Del Popolo Cristaldi, Fiorella
Toffoli, Lisa
Duma, Gian Marco
Mento, Giovanni
author_sort Del Popolo Cristaldi, Fiorella
collection PubMed
description Adaptive cognitive control (CC), the ability to adjust goal-directed behavior according to changing environmental demand, can be instantiated bottom-up by implicit knowledge, including temporal predictability of task-relevant events. In S1-S2 tasks, either local (trial-by-trial hazard expectation) or global (block-by-block expectation) temporal information can induce prediction, allowing for proactive action control. Recent developmental evidence showed that adaptive CC based on global temporal prediction emerges earlier than when it is based on the local one only. However, very little is known about how children learn to dynamically adjust behavior on the fly according to changing global predictive information. Addressing this issue is nevertheless crucial to unravel the mechanisms underlying adaptive CC flexibility. Here we used a modified version of the Dynamic Temporal Prediction task to investigate how typically developing younger (6–8 years) and older children (9–11 years), adolescents (12–15 years) and adults (21–31 years) use global prediction to shape adaptive CC over time. Specifically, the short-long percentage of S2 preparatory intervals was manipulated list-wide to create a slow-fast-slow-fast fixed block sequence and test how efficiently the response speed adapted accordingly. Overall, results revealed that in all groups behavioral performance is successfully adjusted as a function of global prediction in the late phase of the task (block 3 to 4). Remarkably, only adolescents and adults exhibit an early adaptation of adaptive CC (block 1 to 2), while children younger than 11 show sluggish ability in inferring implicit changes in global predictive rules. This age-related dissociation suggests that, although being present from an early age, adaptive CC based on global predictive information needs more developmental space to become flexible in an efficient way. In the light of a neuroconstructivist approach, we suggest that bottom-up driven implicit flexibility may represent a key prerequisite for the development of efficient explicit cognitive control
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spelling pubmed-99556372023-02-25 Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development Del Popolo Cristaldi, Fiorella Toffoli, Lisa Duma, Gian Marco Mento, Giovanni PLoS One Research Article Adaptive cognitive control (CC), the ability to adjust goal-directed behavior according to changing environmental demand, can be instantiated bottom-up by implicit knowledge, including temporal predictability of task-relevant events. In S1-S2 tasks, either local (trial-by-trial hazard expectation) or global (block-by-block expectation) temporal information can induce prediction, allowing for proactive action control. Recent developmental evidence showed that adaptive CC based on global temporal prediction emerges earlier than when it is based on the local one only. However, very little is known about how children learn to dynamically adjust behavior on the fly according to changing global predictive information. Addressing this issue is nevertheless crucial to unravel the mechanisms underlying adaptive CC flexibility. Here we used a modified version of the Dynamic Temporal Prediction task to investigate how typically developing younger (6–8 years) and older children (9–11 years), adolescents (12–15 years) and adults (21–31 years) use global prediction to shape adaptive CC over time. Specifically, the short-long percentage of S2 preparatory intervals was manipulated list-wide to create a slow-fast-slow-fast fixed block sequence and test how efficiently the response speed adapted accordingly. Overall, results revealed that in all groups behavioral performance is successfully adjusted as a function of global prediction in the late phase of the task (block 3 to 4). Remarkably, only adolescents and adults exhibit an early adaptation of adaptive CC (block 1 to 2), while children younger than 11 show sluggish ability in inferring implicit changes in global predictive rules. This age-related dissociation suggests that, although being present from an early age, adaptive CC based on global predictive information needs more developmental space to become flexible in an efficient way. In the light of a neuroconstructivist approach, we suggest that bottom-up driven implicit flexibility may represent a key prerequisite for the development of efficient explicit cognitive control Public Library of Science 2023-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC9955637/ /pubmed/36827315 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0281417 Text en © 2023 Del Popolo Cristaldi et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Del Popolo Cristaldi, Fiorella
Toffoli, Lisa
Duma, Gian Marco
Mento, Giovanni
Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
title Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
title_full Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
title_fullStr Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
title_full_unstemmed Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
title_short Little fast, little slow, should I stay or should I go? Adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
title_sort little fast, little slow, should i stay or should i go? adapting cognitive control to local-global temporal prediction across typical development
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9955637/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36827315
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0281417
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