Abstract

In adults and seven- to eight-year-old children, event-related potentials (ERPs) were analyzed during quiet observation and detailed paired comparison of visual stimuli. In both age groups, we showed the differences in the initial stages (component N1) of sensory analysis in these situations. In adults, an increase in the negativity during the initial stages of analysis was observed in the caudal and central areas of the cortex during presentation of standard and test stimuli. In the frontal areas of the cortex, an increase in the negative potential was observed only in ERPs induced by the test stimulus. In children, an increase in the negativity at the initial phases of analysis of stimuli in the situation of working memory, as compared to quiet observation, was confined to the caudal areas of the cortex. Differential curves that characterize analysis of standard and test stimuli showed age-related differences in the initial and late phases of information processing under the conditions of working memory. In adults, the differential curves that characterize analysis of the standard stimulus were represented by negative phases, and the curves related to the test stimulus, by positive phases. In children, late phases of analysis of the standard and test stimuli had smaller differences as compared to adults: the late positive wave was predominant in the responses to both standard and test stimulus in the caudal areas of the cortex. In the frontal areas, there was no considerable increase in the amplitude of the late positive wave in response to the test stimulus. This fact, together with the absence of enhancement of initial negativity in the frontal areas, which reflects analysis of the test stimulus, indicates that the prefrontal cortex plays a smaller role in the comparison of the memory trace with the current information in seven- to eight-year-old children. The data obtained suggest that the central executive of working memory is not sufficiently mature in children aged seven to eight years.

Full Text
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