神经科学见解:注意力、工作记忆和抑制控制

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences Future of Children Pub Date : 2016-09-01 DOI:10.1353/FOC.2016.0014
C. Raver, C. Blair
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引用次数: 33

摘要

摘要:在这篇文章中,Cybele Raver和Clancy Blair探讨了一组被称为执行功能(EF)的认知过程,包括对注意力的灵活控制,通过工作记忆保存信息的能力,以及维持抑制控制的能力。一方面,他们可以帮助学生在面对具有挑战性的学业任务时控制焦虑。另一方面,当孩子们经历长期的压力环境时,例如贫困、无家可归和邻里犯罪,这些同样的过程就会被破坏。这种不良的早期经历干扰了儿童英语的发展,阻碍了他们管理具有挑战性的情况的能力。通过行为例子和经验证据,Raver和Blair说明了儿童的认知发展与英语是如何交织在一起的。他们展示了儿童对高阶思维的调节是如何与情绪的调节相关联的——以自上而下和自下而上的方式——他们回顾了早期大脑发育、EF和情绪调节以及儿童学习成绩的研究。他们还研究了以EF为目标的教育干预和以情绪和认知调节为目标的综合干预的效果。我们对EF的理解对k - 3学前教育政策意味着什么?首先,Raver和Blair写道,为了帮助幼儿学习,学区不仅需要他们的学业准备数据,还需要EF关键维度的数据。其次,我们已经有了干预措施,至少可以部分缩小面临多种逆境的孩子和没有面临逆境的孩子在神经认知功能和学业成绩方面的差距。然而,他们认为,从长远来看,帮助这些孩子的最好方法是投资于减少他们暴露于慢性严重压力的项目。
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Neuroscientific Insights: Attention, Working Memory, and Inhibitory Control
Summary:In this article, Cybele Raver and Clancy Blair explore a group of cognitive processes called executive function (EF)—including the flexible control of attention, the ability to hold information through working memory, and the ability to maintain inhibitory controlEF processes are crucial for young children’s learning. On the one hand, they can help students control their anxiety when they face challenging academic tasks. On the other, these same processes can be undermined when children experience chronically stressful situations—for example, poverty, homelessness, and neighborhood crime. Such adverse early experiences interfere with children’s development of EF, hampering their ability to manage challenging situationsThrough both behavioral examples and empirical evidence, Raver and Blair illustrate how children’s cognitive development is intertwined with EF. They show how children’s regulation of higher-order thinking is related to the regulation of emotion—in both top- down and bottom-up fashion—and they review research on early brain development, EF and emotion regulation, and children’s academic performance. They also examine the efficacy of educational interventions that target EF and of integrated interventions that target both emotional and cognitive regulation.What does our understanding of EF imply for policy in pre-K–3 education? First, write Raver and Blair, to help young children learn, school districts need data not only on their academic readiness but also on key dimensions of EF. Second, we already have interventions that can at least partially close the gap in neurocognitive function and academic achievement between children who face multiple types of adversity and those who don’t. In the long run, though, they argue, the best way to help these children is to invest in programs that reduce their exposure to chronic severe stress.
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Future of Children
Future of Children Multiple-
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期刊介绍: The Future of Children is a collaboration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and the Brookings Institution. The mission of The Future of Children is to translate the best social science research about children and youth into information that is useful to policymakers, practitioners, grant-makers, advocates, the media, and students of public policy. The project publishes two journals and policy briefs each year, and provides various short summaries of our work. Topics range widely -- from income policy to family issues to education and health – with children’s policy as the unifying element. The senior editorial team is diverse, representing two institutions and multiple disciplines.
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