Effects of Feedback-Related Negativity on Excecutive Function and Development in Preschoolers

Presenter(s): Dakota Paulus—Biology, Biochemistry Minor

Co-Presenter(s): Nisha Sridhar, Katia Pramono

Faculty Mentor(s): Tyson Barker, Leticia Hayes

Session 5: The Wonders of the Brain

Executive function (EF) is a set of higher-order cognitive skills that support early learning and development . EF is highly influenced by environmental factors such as exposure to stress and social interaction . The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is one of the primary neural regions underlying EF . As the PFC develops during early childhood, the brain begins to lay the groundwork for more complex processing . One neural component that supports EF, feedback-related negativity (FRN), is measurable using electroencephalography (EEG), a device that measures the brain’s electrical activity . FRN is observed following both positive and negative feedback and is generated by the PFC . Although FRN is theorized to represent EF, little is known about the FRN development in early childhood: a period of critical EF development .

We predict that children’s FRN will be positively related to a behavioral measure of EF, which was collected during a previous study . Thus, we propose that FRN will reflect an early neural indicator
of EF . Previous research has used tasks without intermittent reinforcement making it difficult to maintain children’s attention . We will be using the Doors Game, which is a novel feedback-based task providing intermittent random reinforcement to children upon their selection between two doors . This task presents the reward immediately alongside feedback, thus it is more age-appropriate due to its ability to sustain their motivation . As feedback processing serves an important role in early childhood development and may serve as a novel indicator of EF, it is a promising area for research .

Parental Stress Correlate Children’s Cognitive Ability

Presenter(s): Jingjie Lu—Psychology

Faculty Mentor(s): Leticia Hayes, Tyson Barker

Session 6: Cerebal Matters

Early childhood is a critical time period for cognitive development, and children exposed to adverse familial stress may impair child cognitive development . Therefore, my hypothesis is parents with a greater stress index will be correlated to higher levels of oxidative stress biomarker-F2 Isoprostane, and lower levels of executive function and language development in their biological children . The tests administered to assess children’s cognitive ability mainly focus on the domains of executive function and language development . We also collected parent-child urine samples to assess parent- child oxidative stress biomarker (F2 Isoprostane) levels, and administered psychological stress questionnaires to the parent . For this research, parent stress will be analyzed from responses on the Parent Stress Index-IV questionnaire . All scores will be compared between the child participants aged three to six on executive function and language measures (N=103) .