Children (Oct 2021)

Developmental Traits of Impulse Control Behavior in School Children under Controlled Attention, Motor Function, and Perception

  • Hsin-Yung Chen,
  • Ling-Fu Meng,
  • Yawen Yu,
  • Chen-Chi Chen,
  • Li-Yu Hung,
  • Shih-Che Lin,
  • Huang-Ju Chi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/children8100922
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 10
p. 922

Abstract

Read online

This research surveyed the characteristics of the developmental traits of impulse control behavior in children through parent-report questionnaires. After matching for gender and attention behavior, as well as controlling for variables (motor and perception) which might confound impulse control, 710 participants (355 girls and 355 boys; grade, 1–5; age, 7–12 years) were recruited from a database of 1763 children. Results demonstrated that there was a significant difference between grade 1 and grade 5 in impulse control. Conversely, no significant differences were found when comparing other grades. The present findings indicate that a striking development of impulse control occurs from grade 4 to 5. Moreover, the plateau of impulse control development from grade 1 to 4 implies that a long transition period is needed to prepare children to develop future impulse control. In conclusion, the age-dependent maturation associated with stage-wise development is a critical characteristic of impulse control development in school age children. Further discussions are made regarding this characteristic, such as from the perspective of frontal lobe development.

Keywords