Neural specialization with generalizable representations underlies children's cognitive development of attention.

L Hao, S Peng, Y Zhou, X Chen, J Qiu, W Luo… - American …, 2024 - psycnet.apa.org
L Hao, S Peng, Y Zhou, X Chen, J Qiu, W Luo, L Zhuang, J Xu, Y Wang, H Su, H Guan, J Luo…
American Psychologist, 2024psycnet.apa.org
From childhood to adulthood, the human brain develops highly specialized yet interacting
neural modules that give rise to nuanced attention and other cognitive functions. Each
module can specialize over development to support specific functions, yet also coexist in
multiple neurobiological modes to support distinct processes. Advances in cognitive
neuroscience have conceptualized human attention as a set of cognitive processes
anchored in highly specialized yet interacting neural systems. The underlying mechanisms …
Abstract
From childhood to adulthood, the human brain develops highly specialized yet interacting neural modules that give rise to nuanced attention and other cognitive functions. Each module can specialize over development to support specific functions, yet also coexist in multiple neurobiological modes to support distinct processes. Advances in cognitive neuroscience have conceptualized human attention as a set of cognitive processes anchored in highly specialized yet interacting neural systems. The underlying mechanisms of how these systems interplay to support children’s cognitive development of multiple attention processes remain unknown. Leveraging developmental functional magnetic resonance imaging with attention network test paradigm, we demonstrate differential neurocognitive development of three core attentional processes from childhood to adulthood, with alerting reaching adult-like level earlier, followed by orienting and executive attention with more protracted development throughout middle and late childhood. Relative to adults, young children exhibit immature specialization with less pronounced dissociation of neural systems specific to each attentional process. Children manifest adult-like distributed representations in the ventral attention and cingulo-opercular networks, but less stable and weaker generalizable representations across multiple processes in the dorsal attention network. Our findings provide insights into the functional specialization and generalization of neural representations scaffolding cognitive development of core attentional processes from childhood to adulthood.(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association
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