The structure of executive functions in preschool children and chimpanzees

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作者
Christoph J. Völter
Eva Reindl
Elisa Felsche
Zeynep Civelek
Andrew Whalen
Zsuzsa Lugosi
Lisa Duncan
Esther Herrmann
Josep Call
Amanda M. Seed
机构
[1] University of St Andrews,School of Psychology and Neuroscience
[2] University of Vienna,Comparative Cognition, Messerli Research Institute, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Medical University of Vienna
[3] Durham University,Department of Anthropology
[4] Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,Department of Comparative Cultural Psychology
[5] University of Edinburgh,Roslin Institute
[6] University of Stirling,Division of Psychology
[7] University of Aberdeen,School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition
[8] University of Portsmouth,Department of Psychology
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摘要
Executive functions (EF) are a core aspect of cognition. Research with adult humans has produced evidence for unity and diversity in the structure of EF. Studies with preschoolers favour a 1-factor model, in which variation in EF tasks is best explained by a single underlying trait on which all EF tasks load. How EF are structured in nonhuman primates remains unknown. This study starts to fill this gap through a comparative, multi-trait multi-method test battery with preschoolers (N = 185) and chimpanzees (N = 55). The battery aimed at measuring working memory updating, inhibition, and attention shifting with three non-verbal tasks per function. For both species the correlations between tasks were low to moderate and not confined to tasks within the same putative function. Factor analyses produced some evidence for the unity of executive functions in both groups, in that our analyses revealed shared variance. However, we could not conclusively distinguish between 1-, 2- or 3-factor models. We discuss the implications of our findings with respect to the ecological validity of current psychometric research.
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