A Dynamical Reconceptualization of Executive-Function Development

Perspect Psychol Sci. 2021 Nov;16(6):1198-1208. doi: 10.1177/1745691620966792. Epub 2021 Feb 16.

Abstract

Executive function plays a foundational role in everyday behaviors across the life span. The theoretical understanding of executive-function development, however, is still a work in progress. Doebel proposed that executive-function development reflects skills using control in the service of behavior-using mental content such as knowledge and beliefs to guide behavior in a context-specific fashion. This liberating view contrasts with modular views of executive function. This new view resembles some older dynamic-systems concepts that long ago proposed that behavior reflects the assembly of multiple pieces in context. We dig into this resemblance and evaluate what else dynamic-systems theory adds to the understanding of executive-function development. We describe core dynamic-systems concepts and apply them to executive function-as conceptualized by Doebel-and through this lens explain the multilevel nature of goal-directed behavior and how a capacity to behave in a goal-directed fashion across contexts emerges over development. We then describe a dynamic systems model of goal-directed behavior during childhood and, finally, address broader theoretical implications of dynamic-systems theory and propose new translational implications for fostering children's capacity to behave in a goal-directed fashion across everyday contexts.

Keywords: child development; cognition; developmental process; dynamic-systems theory; executive function.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Child Development*
  • Executive Function*
  • Humans
  • Knowledge