Abstract

This study examined neurocognitive differences between children and adults in the ability to learn and adapt simple stimulus–response associations through feedback. Fourteen typically developing children (mean age=10.2) and 15 healthy adults (mean age=25.5) completed a simple task in which they learned to associate visually presented stimuli with manual responses based on performance feedback (acquisition phase), and then reversed and re-learned those associations following an unexpected change in reinforcement contingencies (reversal phase). Electrophysiological activity was recorded throughout task performance. We found no group differences in learning-related changes in performance (reaction time, accuracy) or in the amplitude of event-related potentials (ERPs) associated with stimulus processing (P3 ERP) or feedback processing (feedback-related negativity; FRN) during the acquisition phase. However, children's performance was significantly more disrupted by the reversal than adults and FRN amplitudes were significantly modulated by the reversal phase in children but not adults. These findings indicate that children have specific difficulties with reinforcement learning when acquired behaviours must be altered. This may be caused by the added demands on immature executive functioning, specifically response monitoring, created by the requirement to reverse the associations, or a developmental difference in the way in which children and adults approach reinforcement learning.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe ability to learn and modify behaviours based on the positive and negative outcomes of our actions is an important skill used throughout the lifespan

  • Fourteen typically developing children and 15 healthy adults completed a simple task in which they learned to associate visually presented stimuli with manual responses based on performance feedback, and reversed and re-learned those associations following an unexpected change in reinforcement contingencies

  • We found no group differences in learning-related changes in performance or in the amplitude of event-related potentials (ERPs) associated with stimulus processing (P3 ERP) or feedback processing during the acquisition phase

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to learn and modify behaviours based on the positive and negative outcomes of our actions is an important skill used throughout the lifespan. This skill, known as reinforcement learning (Holroyd and Coles, 2002; Thorndike and Bruce, 1911), may be valuable in the first two decades of life, affording the naïve developing child an effective method of identifying advantageous behaviours and discerning when and how learned actions should be adapted for changing contexts. A thorough understanding of the typical development of reinforcement learning may help clarify these deficits, but few studies have examined this aspect of cognitive development. Shephard et al / Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience 7 (2014) 94–105

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