2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2015.05.006
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Children with positive attitudes towards mind-wandering provide invalid subjective reports of mind-wandering during an experimental task

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Cited by 19 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(42 reference statements)
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“…However, it is also possible that diagnosed children have more experience of reflecting upon their cognitive functioning, after receiving a clinical assessment and some kind of intervention, which could inflate the results. Partly in line with this, Zhang and colleges have argued that children with negative attitudes towards MW provided more valid subjective reports of the phenomenon that children with positive attitudes (Zhang, Song, Ye, & Wang, ). In addition, we examined the effect of MW beyond ADHD symptoms in children.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…However, it is also possible that diagnosed children have more experience of reflecting upon their cognitive functioning, after receiving a clinical assessment and some kind of intervention, which could inflate the results. Partly in line with this, Zhang and colleges have argued that children with negative attitudes towards MW provided more valid subjective reports of the phenomenon that children with positive attitudes (Zhang, Song, Ye, & Wang, ). In addition, we examined the effect of MW beyond ADHD symptoms in children.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…68 ). As certain subtypes of spontaneous cognitive processes are detectable in time-varying functional connectivity measurements 68 , it could be hypothesized that part of our results might pertain to the age-related changes in the occurrence of mind wandering episodes and in the content/type of spontaneous cognitive processes observed from childhood to young adulthood and from young to late adulthood 63,[69][70][71][72][73][74][75][76][77] . Further studies should investigate this critical issue.…”
Section: Results Of Static Rsfc Analyses Are In Line With Previous Stmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Similar issues concerning the need for equating the difficulty of ongoing (vigilance) tasks in different age groups arise in relation to studying spontaneous future (and past) thoughts in children, and especially in very young children who may also have difficulties in meta-awareness or noticing and reporting spontaneous thoughts-more so than older adults (e.g., see Chen, 2013, cited in Ye, Song, Zhang, & Wang, 2014. Because of these difficulties, there are currently less than a handful studies on mind-wandering in older children and adolescents (e.g., Ye et al, 2014;Van den Driessche et al, 2017;Stawarczyk et al, 2014;Zhang, Song, Ye, & Wang, 2013), with virtually no developmental studies on children's spontaneous future thinking. The studies reported by McCormack et al and Caza and Atance in this issue are therefore starting to fill this gap in the literature by developing and testing new methods that have resulted in important new insights on children's spontaneous future thinking ability and its relationship with its voluntary counterpart.…”
Section: Development Across the Life Spanmentioning
confidence: 99%