245 healthy participants aged 8 to 30 years old
Cognitive maturation (processing speed, voluntary response suppression, and spatial working memory) measured using oculomotor tasks
Processing speed, voluntary response suppression, and working memory mature at different rates through late childhood and into adolescence, reaching adult levels between ages 14 and 19.
To characterize cognitive maturation through adolescence, processing speed, voluntary response suppression, and spatial working memory were measured in 8- to 30-year-old (N = 245) healthy participants using oculomotor tasks. Development progressed with a steep initial improvement in performance followed by stabilization in adolescence. Adult-level mature performance began at approximately 15, 14, and 19 years of age for processing speed, response inhibition, and working memory, respectively. Although processes developed independently, processing speed influenced the development of working memory whereas the development of response suppression and working memory were interdependent. These results indicate that processing speed, voluntary response suppression, and working memory mature through late childhood and into adolescence. How brain maturation specific to adolescence may support cognitive maturation is discussed.
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Beatríz Luna
Krista E. Garver
Trinity Urban
Child Development
University of Pittsburgh
Carnegie Mellon University
University of Illinois Chicago
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Luna et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7f03f319e71454dbede4b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2004.00745.x