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2018
DOI: 10.1037/pspi0000124
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Can an unpredictable childhood environment enhance working memory? Testing the sensitized-specialization hypothesis.

Abstract: Although growing up in an adverse childhood environment tends to impair cognitive functions, evolutionary-developmental theory suggests that this might be only one part of the story. A person's mind may instead become developmentally specialized and potentially enhanced for solving problems in the types of environments in which the person grew up. In the current research, we tested whether these specialized advantages in cognitive function might be sensitized to emerge in currently uncertain contexts. We refer… Show more

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Cited by 103 publications
(129 citation statements)
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References 87 publications
(235 reference statements)
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“…A conditional adaptation perspective has been applied not only to the development of personality traits such as aggression, impulsivity, and risk taking (e.g., Belsky et al 1991, Daly & Wilson 2005, Del Giudice 2015b, Ellis et al 2012a, but also to cognitive abilities such as enhanced stimulus-response learning and executive function components relevant to monitoring changes in the environment (e.g., the ability to rapidly switch between tasks and update working memory) (Mittal et al 2015, Young et al 2018; for a review, see Ellis et al 2017a). Such cognitive traits can be especially useful in unpredictable and fluctuating contexts.…”
Section: Beyond Dysregulation: Developmental Plasticity and Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A conditional adaptation perspective has been applied not only to the development of personality traits such as aggression, impulsivity, and risk taking (e.g., Belsky et al 1991, Daly & Wilson 2005, Del Giudice 2015b, Ellis et al 2012a, but also to cognitive abilities such as enhanced stimulus-response learning and executive function components relevant to monitoring changes in the environment (e.g., the ability to rapidly switch between tasks and update working memory) (Mittal et al 2015, Young et al 2018; for a review, see Ellis et al 2017a). Such cognitive traits can be especially useful in unpredictable and fluctuating contexts.…”
Section: Beyond Dysregulation: Developmental Plasticity and Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consumers adapt to unfavorable social comparisons by seeing themselves as more connected to others (Piff et al, 2010) and giving more consideration to how their choices affect others (Kraus & Stephens, 2012). Finally, consumers adapt to environmental uncertainty by becoming more responsive to situational cues (Mittal, Griskevicius, Simpson, Sung, & Young, 2015;Young, Griskevicius, Simpson, Waters, & Mittal, 2018) and maximizing opportunities in the present (Ozanne, Hill, & Wright, 1998).…”
Section: Adaptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They are also less likely to buy health insurance, an effect that also results from an increased willingness to take risks and is independent of the consumer's current level of resources (Mittal & Griskevicius, ). Interestingly, having grown up poor can help people better handle conditions of unpredictability, which may enhance working memory (Young, Griskevicius, Simpson, Waters, & Mittal, ) and performance on tasks that require adaptation under stress (Mittal, Griskevicius, Simpson, Sung, & Young, ). Thus, consumers who grew up in conditions of scarcity are at a disadvantage with regard to self‐control in their adult life, but this disadvantage may be reversed depending on characteristics of the current context.…”
Section: The Mechanisms Behind Self‐controlmentioning
confidence: 99%