Preschoolers’ executive functions following indoor and outdoor free play

IF 3.4 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES
Andrew E. Koepp, Elizabeth T. Gershoff, Darla M. Castelli, Amy E. Bryan
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background

Children's executive functions develop rapidly during the preschool years and are critical for attending to lessons and meeting classroom expectations. Engaging in periods of outdoor play that have lower regulatory requirements and that provide opportunities for physical activity may help children maintain control over their behavior when they are back in settings with higher regulatory requirements. However, little work has formally examined this proposition in early childhood.

Methods

This study used a quasi-experimental design to examine preschoolers' executive functions following indoor compared to outdoor play. A total of 72 children (mean age = 4.5 years, 46% female, 73% non-Hispanic White) participated in task-based assessments of attention shifting and inhibitory control and in classroom observations of attention and inhibitory control. A subsample of the children (n = 51) was assessed for physical activity using accelerometry to examine the extent to which young children's physical activity during outdoor play predicted their subsequent executive functions better than their physical activity during indoor play.

Results

Children showed greater attention during classroom circle time following outdoor play compared to after indoor play (d = .34). Children's non-sedentary activity during indoor play was not related to their subsequent task-based executive functions but showed negative associations with their subsequent classroom-based executive functions. Children's percentage of time spent in non-sedentary physical activity during outdoor play showed a quadratic association with subsequent task-based inhibitory control but linear associations with subsequent classroom-based attention and inhibitory control during circle time.

Conclusion

Periods of outdoor play that involve recommended amounts of physical activity may help young children engage executive functions when they return to the classroom.

学龄前儿童在室内和室外自由玩耍后的执行功能
儿童的执行功能在学龄前发展迅速,这对于参加课程和满足课堂期望至关重要。参与对监管要求较低的户外游戏,并提供体育活动的机会,可能有助于儿童在回到有更高监管要求的环境时保持对自己行为的控制。然而,很少有工作正式检查这一命题在儿童早期。方法本研究采用准实验设计,比较学龄前儿童在室内和室外玩耍后的执行功能。共有72名儿童(平均年龄为4.5岁,46%为女性,73%为非西班牙裔白人)参加了基于任务的注意力转移和抑制控制评估以及课堂上的注意力和抑制控制观察。对儿童的子样本(n = 51)进行了身体活动评估,使用加速度计来检验幼儿在户外游戏中的身体活动在多大程度上比在室内游戏中的身体活动更能预测他们随后的执行功能。结果儿童在室外活动后的课堂圈内注意力明显高于室内活动后的课堂圈内注意力(d = .34)。儿童在室内游戏时的非久坐活动与他们随后的基于任务的执行功能无关,但与他们随后的基于课堂的执行功能呈负相关。儿童在户外游戏中花在非久坐体力活动上的时间百分比与随后的基于任务的抑制控制呈二次相关,但与随后的基于课堂的注意力和循环时间的抑制控制呈线性相关。结论:建议量的户外活动可能有助于幼儿在回到教室后参与执行功能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
6.10%
发文量
22
审稿时长
65 days
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