Abstract

The aim of the present work was to analyze the age-related dynamics and nature of interindividual differences in performing the A-not-B task, which addresses working memory in children aged 7-12 months. The cohort consisted of 150 children aged 7-12 months from mono- and dizygotic twin pairs. Working memory was assessed in terms of the maximum delay which the children could tolerate in a delayed response test (the A-not-B task). Performance of the task improved with age, such that a sharp change in the ability to tolerate the delay occurred between nine and ten months of age. Mental development as assessed using the Bayley scale showed a significant correlation with the duration of the delay in the task only after a threshold period (9-10 months of age) in the development of working memory. Analysis of intrapair correlations in mono- and dizygotic twins showed that interindividual differences in the A-not-B task delay at age 7-9 months were completely determined by individual environmental factors (including measurement errors), while at age 10-12 months the leading role in the interindividual variability in this measure was taken by the systematic environment. These results show that the abilities to tolerate delays at the beginning and end of the second six months of life are based on different mechanisms.

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