TopicNeuroscience

task difficulty

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2Total items
1Seminar
1ePoster

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SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Analogical Reasoning and Executive Functions - A Life Span Approach

Jean-Pierre Thibaut
University of Burgundy
Jul 9, 2020

From a developmental standpoint, it has been argued that two major complementary factors contribute to the development of analogy comprehension: world knowledge and executive functions. Here I will provide evidence in support of the second view. Beyond paradigms that manipulate task difficulty (e.g., number and types of distractors and semantic distance between domains) we will provide eye-tracking data that describes differences in the way children and adults compare the base and target domains in analogy problems. We will follow the same approach with ageing people. This latter population provides a unique opportunity to disentangle the contribution of knowledge and executive processes in analogy making since knowledge is (more than) preserved and executive control is decreasing. Using this paradigm, I will show the extent to which world knowledge (assessed through vocabulary) compensates for decreasing executive control in older populations. Our eye-tracking data suggests that, to a certain extent, differences between younger and older adults are analogous to the differences between younger adults and children in the way they compare the base and the target domains in analogy problems.

ePosterNeuroscience

TRACING PUPILS AND PERFORMANCE: TASK DIFFICULTY AND TIMESCALES OF AROUSAL

Sean van Mil, Margot Steijger, Stijn Nuiten, Lola Beerendonk, Jan-Willem de Gee, Johannes Fahrenfort, Simon van Gaal

FENS Forum 2026

task difficulty coverage

2 items

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ePoster1

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