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Featured researches published by Ayelet Lahat.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2010

Neurophysiological correlates of executive function: a comparison of European-Canadian and Chinese-Canadian 5-year-old children

Ayelet Lahat; Rebecca M. Todd; Caitlin E. V. Mahy; Karen Lau; Philip David Zelazo

This study explored the neurophysiological correlates of executive function (EF) in young children from two different cultural backgrounds. Twenty European-Canadian and 17 Chinese-Canadian 5-year-olds participated in a go/no-go task, during which high-density electroencephalographic (EEG) data were recorded. No cultural group differences were observed in childrens behavioral performance on the task, but marked differences were revealed by ERP analyses, which focused on the amplitude and latency of the N2 waveform. Chinese-Canadian children showed larger (i.e., more negative) N2 amplitudes than European-Canadian children on the right side of the scalp on no-go trials, as well as on the left side of the scalp on go trials, and for all children, larger N2 amplitudes were associated with faster median reaction times. Source analyses of the N2 were consistent with the hypothesis that compared to European-Canadian children, Chinese-Canadian children showed more activation in dorsomedial, ventromedial, and (bilateral) ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. These findings reveal that EEG can provide a measure of cultural differences in neurocognitive function that is more sensitive than behavioral data alone; that Chinese-Canadian children show a pattern of hemispheric differentiation in the context of this task than that is more pronounced than that of age-matched European-Canadian children; that the asymmetrically lateralized N2 may be a reliable marker of both effortful inhibition (on the right) and effortful approach (on the left); and that the neural correlates of EF may vary across samples of healthy participants, even in children.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2011

Behavioural inhibition: Is it a risk factor for anxiety?

Ayelet Lahat; Melanie Hong; Nathan A. Fox

Abstract Behavioural inhibition is a stable temperamental trait that is identifiable during infancy and toddlerhood and is characterized by fearful reactivity to novelty. Children identified as behaviourally inhibited have been shown to be at increased risk for developing anxiety disorders such as social phobia. The current review addresses the link between behavioural inhibition and the risk for developing anxiety disorders. Research suggests that this risk may be modulated by a number of extrinsic and intrinsic factors. Extrinsic factors include particular parental beliefs, parenting styles, and childrearing contexts. Intrinsic factors include executive function capacities such as attention bias, attention shifting, inhibitory control, and self-monitoring. In the present paper we review the contribution of these factors to the development of anxiety in behaviourally inhibited children.


Development and Psychopathology | 2012

Temperamental exuberance and executive function predict propensity for risk taking in childhood.

Ayelet Lahat; Kathryn A. Degnan; Lauren K. White; Jennifer Martin McDermott; Heather A. Henderson; C.W. Lejuez; Nathan A. Fox

The present study utilized a multilevel approach to examine developmental trajectories in risk-taking propensity. We examined the moderating role of specific executive function components, attention shifting and inhibitory control, on the link between exuberant temperament in infancy and propensity for risk taking in childhood. Risk taking was assessed using a task previously associated with sensation seeking and antisocial behaviors. Two hundred ninety-one infants were brought into the lab and behaviors reflecting exuberance were observed at 4, 9, 24, and 36 months of age. Executive function was assessed at 48 months of age. Risk-taking propensity was measured when children were 60 months of age. The results indicated that exuberance and attention shifting, but not inhibitory control, significantly interacted to predict propensity for risk taking. Exuberance was positively associated with risk-taking propensity among children who were relatively low in attention shifting but unrelated for children high in attention shifting. These findings illustrated the multifinality of developmental outcomes for temperamentally exuberant young children and pointed to the distinct regulatory influences of different executive functions for children of differing temperaments. Attention shifting likely affords a child the ability to consider both positive and negative consequences and moderates the relation between early exuberance and risk-taking propensity.


Child Development | 2013

An Event‐Related Potential Study of Adolescents' and Young Adults' Judgments of Moral and Social Conventional Violations

Ayelet Lahat; Charles C. Helwig; Philip David Zelazo

The neurocognitive development of moral and conventional judgments was examined. Event-related potentials were recorded while 24 adolescents (13 years) and 30 young adults (20 years) read scenarios with 1 of 3 endings: moral violations, conventional violations, or neutral acts. Participants judged whether the act was acceptable or unacceptable when a rule was assumed or removed. Across age, reaction times were faster for moral than conventional violations when a rule was assumed. Adolescents had larger N2 amplitudes than adults for moral and neutral, but not conventional, acts. N2 amplitudes were larger when a rule was removed than assumed for moral, but not conventional, violations. These findings suggest that the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying moral and conventional judgments continue to develop beyond early adolescence.


Child Psychiatry & Human Development | 2017

Personality Development Within a Generational Context: Life Course Outcomes of Shy Children

Louis A. Schmidt; Alva Tang; Kimberly L. Day; Ayelet Lahat; Michael H. Boyle; Saroj Saigal; Ryan J. Van Lieshout

Studies have shown that shy children born in the 1920s and 1950s had delayed marriage and parenthood, less stable careers, and lower occupational attainment as adults than other children. Do these effects still hold true? We examined demographic and social outcomes of children born between 1977 and 1982 in a prospective longitudinal study. We assessed shyness in childhood (age 8), adolescence (age 12–16), young adulthood (age 22–26), and adulthood (age 30–35), and derived three shyness trajectories (i.e., decreasing, increasing, and low-stable). Social and demographic outcomes for shy children who outgrew their shyness (i.e., decreasing trajectory) were indistinguishable from those who were consistently low on shyness measures. However, a shyness trajectory beginning in adolescence and increasing to adulthood was associated with poorer outcomes, similar to previous studies. These findings highlight the importance of multiple assessments in long-term longitudinal studies and the need to consider personality development within a generational context.


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2016

Neural responses to reward in childhood: relations to early behavioral inhibition and social anxiety

Ayelet Lahat; Brenda E. Benson; Daniel S. Pine; Nathan A. Fox; Monique Ernst

Behavioral inhibition (BI) is an early temperamental profile characterized by negative reactivity to novelty, withdrawal from social situations, and increased risk for social anxiety. Previous research associated BI assessed in early childhood to striatal hypersensitivity in mid-to-late adolescence. The present study examined this association among 10 year-olds, characterized with BI at ages 24 and 36 months on measures of temperamental reactivity. Participants (n = 40) were studied at age 10 using a reward processing task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Child- and maternal-report of social anxiety symptoms was collected at ages 10 and 13. Findings indicate greater caudate activation and stronger striatal connectivity in high, compared to low, behaviorally inhibited children. Caudate activation related to social anxiety symptoms at both ages. These findings suggest that enhanced striatal responsivity reliably manifests among high behaviorally inhibited children as early as age 10. This may reflect hyper-sensitivity to reward or excessive motivation to avoid errors.


Development and Psychopathology | 2015

Small for gestational age and poor fluid intelligence in childhood predict externalizing behaviors among young adults born at extremely low birth weight

Ayelet Lahat; Ryan J. Van Lieshout; Saroj Saigal; Michael H. Boyle; Louis A. Schmidt

Although infants born at extremely low birth weight (ELBW; birth weight < 1000 g) are at increased risk for developing later psychopathology, the mechanisms contributing to this association are largely unknown. In the present study, we examined a putative cognitive link to psychopathology in a cohort of ELBW survivors. These individuals were followed up prospectively at age 8 and again at ages 22-26. At 8 years, participants completed measures of fluid and general intelligence. As young adults, a subset of ELBW survivors free of major neurosensory impairments provided self-reports of personality characteristics related to psychopathology. Data from 66 participants indicated that, as predicted, the association between ELBW and externalizing behaviors was moderated by fluid intelligence. Specifically, ELBW individuals with poor fluid intelligence who were born small for gestational age (birth weight < 10th percentile for gestational age) showed the highest level of externalizing behaviors. These findings provide support for a cumulative risk model and suggest that fluid intelligence might be a cognitive mechanism contributing to the development of psychopathology among nonimpaired individuals who were born at ELBW and small for gestational age.


Human Development | 2012

Towards a Process Model of Children’s Reasoning about Social Domains

Ayelet Lahat; Philip David Zelazo

Social domain theory [Killen, 2007; Nucci, 2001; Smetana, 2006; Turiel, 2002] has made considerable progress in describing the development of reasoning about three domains of human experience: moral, social conventional, and personal. As recognized by Richardson, Mulvey, and Killen [this issue], however, social domain theory does not provide a detailed account of the specific cognitive processes involved in this reasoning, including the processes required for domain identification and the coordination of information from multiple domains. To address this limitation and move social domain theory towards a process model, Richardson et al. invoke the hierarchical competing systems model (HCSM) [Marcovitch & Zelazo, 2009] of the early development of executive function. According to the HCSM, two systems – habit and representational – jointly influence behavior. Whereas the habit system is automatic, associative, and evident even in infancy, the representational system depends on conscious reflection that is mediated, in part, by the prefrontal cortex. Furthermore, the representational system continues to develop well into adolescence, as individuals acquire the ability to take more aspects of a situation into consideration and to formulate and use increasingly complex hierarchical systems of rules [Marcovitch & Zelazo, 2009; see also Zelazo, Muller, Frye, & Marcovitch, 2003]. Routine behavior may be mediated by the habit system, but when a problem is encountered (e.g., when conflict is detected), the reflective representational system is engaged. Aspects of this model have been formalized mathematically – generating testable predictions – and the model makes contact with a large body of research on the development of neurocognitive function. Richardson et al. proposed that for most prototypic events, the habit (experience) system


Developmental Psychobiology | 2018

Trajectories of resting frontal brain activity and psychopathology in female adolescents exposed to child maltreatment

Alva Tang; Vladimir Miskovic; Ayelet Lahat; Masako Tanaka; Harriet L. MacMillan; Ryan J. Van Lieshout; Louis A. Schmidt

Resting frontal electroencephalogram (EEG) alpha asymmetry patterns reflecting different affective and motivational tendencies have been proposed as a putative mechanism underlying resilience among maltreated youth. This 2-year prospective study examined whether developmental stability of resting frontal alpha asymmetry moderated the relation between child maltreatment severity and psychopathology in female adolescents (n = 43; ages 12-16) recruited from child protection agencies. Results identified two trajectories of resting frontal asymmetry: 60.5% displayed stable right and 39.5% displayed stable left frontal alpha asymmetry. Although individuals with these alpha asymmetry profiles experienced comparable childhood trauma severity, adolescents with stable left alpha asymmetry and lower levels of trauma were less likely to present symptoms or an episode of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression over 2 years than those with stable right alpha asymmetry and lower levels of trauma. These findings suggest that developmental patterns of resting left frontal brain activity may buffer against psychopathology in maltreated female youth.


Child Psychiatry & Human Development | 2017

Linking Temperamental Shyness and Social Anxiety in Childhood and Adolescence: Moderating Influences of Sex and Age

Tiffany Y. L. Tsui; Ayelet Lahat; Louis A. Schmidt

Although childhood shyness has been linked to social anxiety problems, the factors playing a role in this association have gone largely unexplored. Here we examined the potential moderating roles of sex and age on this relation in a sample of 119 (75 girls) children (10–12 years) and adolescents (14–16 years). As predicted, shyness was positively associated with social anxiety symptoms. Sex, but not age, served as a moderating factor in linking shyness and social anxiety. Specifically, shyness was more strongly associated with social anxiety symptoms among girls than boys. These results suggest the importance of considering sex differences when examining the relation between shyness and social anxiety in childhood and adolescence.

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