Cognitive and emotional processing in tasks with emotional valence: Analysis of age and gender role on child development variations

Elsevier

Available online 20 September 2023, 100212

Trends in Neuroscience and EducationAuthor links open overlay panel, , Abstract

Cognitive control consists of high-level cognitive processes regulating thoughts and actions during goal-directed behaviour and problem-solving. This study analyses the performance of 4- to 8-year-old children in Stroop-like and ToL tasks using stimuli with different emotional valence. Significant differences were found in the performance in the congruent block of the Stroop-like task, where 5-year-old children presented a higher performance in the neutral condition. Also, a significant difference was only found in the incongruent block (with higher demand for inhibition), which indicates that girls performed better than boys in both task conditions. Variations in the Stroop-like task performance were found in preschoolers but not in older children, especially in girls than in boys. Specifically, these variations were found between age groups with at least two years of difference. No statistically significant differences were found in performance nor planning time in ToL between the age and gender groups in any of the task conditions. The findings highlight the need to analyse the interaction between cognitive and emotional processing, individual differences, and task demands.

Keywords

emotional processing

cognitive control

development

gender

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