PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Spontaneous discovery of novel task solutions in children.

  • Nicolas W Schuck,
  • Amy X Li,
  • Dorit Wenke,
  • Destina S Ay-Bryson,
  • Anika T Loewe,
  • Robert Gaschler,
  • Yee Lee Shing

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266253
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. e0266253

Abstract

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Children often perform worse than adults on tasks that require focused attention. While this is commonly regarded as a sign of incomplete cognitive development, a broader attentional focus could also endow children with the ability to find novel solutions to a given task. To test this idea, we investigated children's ability to discover and use novel aspects of the environment that allowed them to improve their decision-making strategy. Participants were given a simple choice task in which the possibility of strategy improvement was neither mentioned by instructions nor encouraged by explicit error feedback. Among 47 children (8-10 years of age) who were instructed to perform the choice task across two experiments, 27.5% showed a full strategy change. This closely matched the proportion of adults who had the same insight (28.2% of n = 39). The amount of erroneous choices, working memory capacity and inhibitory control, in contrast, indicated substantial disadvantages of children in task execution and cognitive control. A task difficulty manipulation did not affect the results. The stark contrast between age-differences in different aspects of cognitive performance might offer a unique opportunity for educators in fostering learning in children.