Medindia LOGIN REGISTER
Medindia

Kids' Ability to Remember Things Influenced by Mothers

by Rajshri on Feb 7 2010 9:44 AM

Moms play a crucial role in how their children develop advanced cognitive abilities, a new study has revealed.

Executive functioning is a set of advanced cognitive functions-such as the ability to control impulses, remember things, and show mental flexibility-that help us plan and monitor what we do to reach goals.

Although it speedily develops between ages 1 and 6, the new research led by University of Montreal and the University of Minnesota researchers has shown that mothers have a crucial role to play.

The researchers looked at 80 pairs of middle-income Canadian moms and their year-old babies.

It turns out that the ways moms act when they're playing and solving puzzles with their babies can explain some of the differences in children's development of executive functioning.

Children of moms who answered their children's requests for help quickly and accurately; talked about their children's preferences, thoughts, and memories during play; and encouraged successful strategies to help solve difficult problems performed better at a year and a half and 2 years on tasks that call for executive skills than children of moms who didn't use these techniques in interacting with their youngsters.

"The study sheds light on the role parents play in helping children develop skills that are important for later school success and social competence," said Annie Bernier, professor of psychology at the University of Montreal and the study's lead author.

Advertisement
The study appears in journal Child Development.

Source-ANI
RAS


Advertisement