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Self‐Reflection and the Cognitive Control of Behavior: Implications for Learning
Author(s) -
Marcovitch Stuart,
Jacques Sophie,
Boseovski Janet J.,
Zelazo Philip David
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
mind, brain, and education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.624
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1751-228X
pISSN - 1751-2271
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-228x.2008.00044.x
Subject(s) - psychology , cognitive psychology , cognition , affordance , perspective (graphical) , cognitive flexibility , rubric , task (project management) , cognitive science , developmental psychology , computer science , artificial intelligence , mathematics education , management , neuroscience , economics
— In this article, we suggest that self‐reflection and self‐control—studied under the rubric of “executive function” (EF)—have the potential to transform the way in which learning occurs, allowing for the relatively rapid emergence of new behaviors. We describe 2 lines of research that indicate that reflecting on a task and its affordances helps children to respond flexibly in a more top‐down fashion despite interference from prior learning or perceptually salient aspects of the task. Research on A‐not‐B tasks with infants and young children revealed that postswitch flexibility is an inverted U‐shaped function of number of preswitch trials. Overlearning may provide additional opportunities for reflection, in part by freeing up cognitive resources as behavior becomes automatized. Findings from the Flexible Item Selection Task with preschoolers and adults revealed that, although labeling the relevant dimension facilitates performance, performance declines when participants are prohibited from labeling. Labeling one’s perspective on a situation not only helps make that perspective an explicit object of consideration, but it may also help children access more abstract conceptual descriptions of a stimulus. Research on EF has broad implications for the way in which human learning differs from learning in other species and the way in which human learning may change over the course of development.

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