2017
DOI: 10.1037/rev0000078
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A novel ecological account of prefrontal cortex functional development.

Abstract: In this paper, we argue that prefrontal cortex ontogenetic functional development is best understood through an ecological lens. We first begin by reviewing evidence supporting the existing consensus that PFC structural and functional development is protracted based on maturational constraints. We then examine recent findings from neuroimaging studies in infants, early life stress research, and connectomics that support the novel hypothesis that PFC functional development is driven by reciprocal processes of n… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(60 citation statements)
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References 240 publications
(455 reference statements)
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“…Access to complex sensory, linguistic, motoric, and social experiences that occur in the context of caregiver interactions have been argued to shape the early forms of learning that scaffold the development of more complex forms of cognition, including EF (McLaughlin et al, 2017). We argue that cognitive stimulation supports development of the feed-forward and feedback loops between sensory processing regions and the PFC, which lays the groundwork for the complex computations necessary for EF (Werchan and Amso, 2017).…”
Section: Existing Models Of Environmental Experience and Ef Developmentmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Access to complex sensory, linguistic, motoric, and social experiences that occur in the context of caregiver interactions have been argued to shape the early forms of learning that scaffold the development of more complex forms of cognition, including EF (McLaughlin et al, 2017). We argue that cognitive stimulation supports development of the feed-forward and feedback loops between sensory processing regions and the PFC, which lays the groundwork for the complex computations necessary for EF (Werchan and Amso, 2017).…”
Section: Existing Models Of Environmental Experience and Ef Developmentmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…However, unlike experience-expectant inputs that are critical in sensory development, there is unlikely to be a singular set of specific environmental experiences that is required optimal PFC development. Indeed, a recent model of PFC argues that PFC development reflects adaptation to the child’s changing environment (Werchan and Amso, 2017), an experience-dependent rather than experience-expectant process. Below, we articulate a novel conceptual account of how specific early environmental experiences that are associated with childhood SES could impact experience-dependent learning and in turn produce lasting differences in EF and PFC development.…”
Section: Environmental Influences On Ef and Pfc Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Executive function (EF), a collection of potentially modifiable, integrated neurocognitive processes involved in higher‐order cognition (2), has been highlighted as a potential protective factor against obesity. EF undergoes rapid structural and functional growth between approximately 3 and 5 years of age (3) and it is necessary for self‐regulated, purposeful, and goal‐directed thought and behavior, including behaviors associated with obesity (4). Three commonly agreed upon EF processes are as follows: inhibitory control (the capacity to inhibit an automatic or prepotent thought, emotion, or behavior in favor of a less desirable but more beneficial response), cognitive flexibility (the capacity to fluidly shift the focus of attention from one dimension of a given set of stimuli to a second less salient dimension), and working memory (the ability to retain multiple pieces of transitory information, “on‐line,” in the mind, for potential manipulation) (5).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%