Developmental trajectories in toddlers' self-restraint predict individual differences in executive functions 14 years later: A behavioral genetic analysis.
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2011
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Developmental Psychology
- Vol. 47 (5) , 1410-1430
- https://doi.org/10.1037/a0023750
Abstract
We examined whether self-restraint in early childhood predicted individual differences in 3 executive functions (EFs; inhibiting prepotent responses, updating working memory, and shifting task sets) in late adolescence in a sample of approximately 950 twins. At ages 14, 20, 24, and 36 months, the children were shown an attractive toy and told not to touch it for 30 s. Latency to touch the toy increased with age, and latent class growth modeling distinguished 2 groups of children that differed in their latencies to touch the toy at all 4 time points. Using confirmatory factor analysis, we decomposed the 3 EFs (measured with latent variables at age 17 years) into a Common EF factor (isomorphic to response inhibition ability) and 2 factors specific to updating and shifting. Less-restrained children had significantly lower scores on the Common EF factor, equivalent scores on the Updating-Specific factor, and higher scores on the Shifting-Specific factor than did the more-restrained children. The less-restrained group also had lower IQ scores, but this effect was entirely mediated by the EF components. Twin models indicated that the associations were primarily genetic in origin for the Common EF variable but split between genetics and nonshared environment for the Shifting-Specific variable. These results suggest a biological relation between individual differences in self-restraint and EFs, one that begins early in life and persists into late adolescence.Keywords
Funding Information
- MacArthur Foundation
- National Institutes of Health (MH063207; MH079485; HD010333; HD050346)
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- When Mental Inflexibility Facilitates Executive ControlPsychological Science, 2010
- Wait For It! A Twin Study of Inhibitory Control in Early ChildhoodBehavior Genetics, 2009
- Latent class analysis of the Child Behavior Checklist Obsessive-Compulsive ScaleComprehensive Psychiatry, 2009
- Toward a physical basis of attention and self-regulation☆Physics of Life Reviews, 2009
- Behavioral disinhibition: Liability for externalizing spectrum disorders and its genetic and environmental relation to response inhibition across adolescence.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2009
- Socioeconomic status and the developing brainTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2009
- Individual differences in executive functions are almost entirely genetic in origin.Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2008
- Multidisciplinary perspectives on attention and the development of self-regulationProgress in Neurobiology, 2007
- Exploring the unity and diversity of the neural substrates of executive functioningHuman Brain Mapping, 2005
- Modern Robust Data Analysis Methods: Measures of Central Tendency.Psychological Methods, 2003