Cognitive flexibility is the ability to change the way of responding when the demands of the environment change. This study tested how cognitive flexibility develops across the lifespan. We used a new computerized task that gives a continuous score instead of just right or wrong answers. 221 healthy adults aged 18 to 71 completed the Continuous score Probabilistic Reversal Learning Test (CPRLT). We calculated mean absolute error and adjusted error for rule based learning, and fitted a Rescorla Wagner model to estimate each person's learning rate (alpha) for reward based learning. All three scores have one breakpoint, performance improved rapidly from childhood to young adulthood, then declined slowly. Rule based learning peaked around age 20. Reward based learning peaked earlier, around age 18. This suggests that reward based learning matures before rule based learning. The pattern fits with brain development: reward circuits mature earlier, while prefrontal regions for rule based learning develop later. Our continuous measure captured this difference, which binary tasks would miss.
Jowkar, M., Makhsous, M., Rezayat, E.
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