MENTAL RESOURCES, PROCESSING SPEED, AND INHIBITORY CONTROL - A DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVE

Citation
Kr. Ridderinkhof et Mw. Vandermolen, MENTAL RESOURCES, PROCESSING SPEED, AND INHIBITORY CONTROL - A DEVELOPMENTAL PERSPECTIVE, Biological psychology, 45(1-3), 1997, pp. 241-261
Citations number
103
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Experimental","Psychology, Biological","Behavioral Sciences",Psychology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03010511
Volume
45
Issue
1-3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
241 - 261
Database
ISI
SICI code
0301-0511(1997)45:1-3<241:MRPSAI>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The present article addresses the claim that the speed of information processing qualifies as a processing resource. This claim contends tha t age-related changes in processing speed pertain to all cognitive pro cesses to the same proportional degree. That is, processing speed is c ompared to the clock speed of a microcomputer: as young children's clo ck speed increases, the speed of processing in all cognitive processes increases until the adult level is reached. Re-analyses of recent beh avioral and psychophysiological data provide evidence against the noti on that development is characterized by an increase in children's glob al clock speed, and refute the claim that processing speed operates as a mental resource on which all cognitive processes depend to the same extent. Rather, the results emphasize the role of inhibitory control in cognitive development, and we consider the relevance of inhibitory development to the issue of age-related changes in processing capacity . (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.