Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917261 Infant Behavior and Development 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Cognitive flexibility requires processing multiple sources of information and flexible adaptation of behavioral responses. Poverty negatively impacts cognitive control in young children, but its effects on infants are not well-understood. This study investigated longitudinally the development of cognitive flexibility in low-income infants. Thirty-two infants (15 low-SES, 17 high-SES) were tested at 6, 9, and 12 months of age. Cognitive flexibility was measured with a perseverative reaching task, where infants were taught to reach to one location and then asked to switch to a second location. High-SES infants replicated the typical developmental trajectory, reaching randomly at 6 months, perseverating at 9 months, and reaching correctly at 12 months. In contrast, the low-SES infants showed a delayed pattern, reaching correctly at 6 months, randomly at 9 months, and perseverating at 12 months. Links between cognitive flexibility and frontal cortex development are explored as a potential mechanism.

► This study longitudinally investigated cognitive flexibility in low-income infants. ► Low and high-SES infants performed a perseverative reaching task at 6, 9, and 12 months. ► Low-SES infants performed differently from high SES-infants at each session. ► We conclude that cognitive delays associated with poverty begin before 6 months.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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