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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca E. Martin is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca E. Martin.


Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis | 2016

Promise and Paradox: Measuring Students' Non-Cognitive Skills and the Impact of Schooling.

Martin R. West; Matthew A. Kraft; Amy S. Finn; Rebecca E. Martin; Angela L. Duckworth; Christopher F. O. Gabrieli; John D. E. Gabrieli

We used self-report surveys to gather information on a broad set of non-cognitive skills from 1,368 eighth graders. At the student level, scales measuring conscientiousness, self-control, grit, and growth mindset are positively correlated with attendance, behavior, and test-score gains between fourth grade and eighth grade. Conscientiousness, self-control, and grit are unrelated to test-score gains at the school level, however, and students attending over-subscribed charter schools score lower on these scales than do students attending district schools. Exploiting admissions lotteries, we find positive impacts of charter school attendance on achievement and attendance but negative impacts on these non-cognitive skills. We provide suggestive evidence that these paradoxical results are driven by reference bias or the tendency for survey responses to be influenced by social context.


Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2013

Cortical gray-matter thinning is associated with age-related improvements on executive function tasks

Maria Kharitonova; Rebecca E. Martin; John D. E. Gabrieli; Margaret A. Sheridan

Across development children show marked improvement in their executive functions (EFs), including the ability to hold information in working memory and to deploy cognitive control, allowing them to ignore prepotent responses in favor of newly learned behaviors. How does the brain support these age-related improvements? Age-related cortical gray-matter thinning, thought to result from selective pruning of inefficient synaptic connections and increases in myelination, may support age-related improvements in EFs. Here we used structural MRI to measure cortical thickness. We investigate the association between cortical thickness in three cortical regions of interest (ROIs), and age-related changes in cognitive control and working memory in 5-10 year old children. We found significant associations between reductions in cortical thickness and age-related improvements in performance on both working memory and cognitive control tasks. Moreover, we observed a dissociation between ROIs typically thought to underlie changes in cognitive control (right Inferior Frontal gyrus and Anterior Cingulate cortex) and age-related improvements in cognitive control, and ROIs for working memory (superior parietal cortex), and age-related changes in a working memory task. These data add to our growing understanding of how structural maturation of the brain supports vast behavioral changes in executive functions observed across childhood.


Psychological Science | 2014

Cognitive Skills, Student Achievement Tests, and Schools:

Amy S. Finn; Matthew A. Kraft; Martin R. West; Julia A. Leonard; Crystal E. Bish; Rebecca E. Martin; Margaret A. Sheridan; Christopher F. O. Gabrieli; John D. E. Gabrieli

Cognitive skills predict academic performance, so schools that improve academic performance might also improve cognitive skills. To investigate the impact schools have on both academic performance and cognitive skills, we related standardized achievement-test scores to measures of cognitive skills in a large sample (N = 1,367) of eighth-grade students attending traditional, exam, and charter public schools. Test scores and gains in test scores over time correlated with measures of cognitive skills. Despite wide variation in test scores across schools, differences in cognitive skills across schools were negligible after we controlled for fourth-grade test scores. Random offers of enrollment to oversubscribed charter schools resulted in positive impacts of such school attendance on math achievement but had no impact on cognitive skills. These findings suggest that schools that improve standardized achievement-test scores do so primarily through channels other than improving cognitive skills.


Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience | 2017

The transition from childhood to adolescence is marked by a general decrease in amygdala reactivity and an affect-specific ventral-to-dorsal shift in medial prefrontal recruitment

Jennifer A. Silvers; Catherine Insel; Alisa Powers; Peter Franz; Chelsea Helion; Rebecca E. Martin; Jochen Weber; Walter Mischel; B.J. Casey; Kevin N. Ochsner

Understanding how and why affective responses change with age is central to characterizing typical and atypical emotional development. Prior work has emphasized the role of the amygdala and prefrontal cortex (PFC), which show age-related changes in function and connectivity. However, developmental neuroimaging research has only recently begun to unpack whether age effects in the amygdala and PFC are specific to affective stimuli or may be found for neutral stimuli as well, a possibility that would support a general, rather than affect-specific, account of amygdala-PFC development. To examine this, 112 individuals ranging from 6 to 23 years of age viewed aversive and neutral images while undergoing fMRI scanning. Across age, participants reported more negative affect and showed greater amygdala responses for aversive than neutral stimuli. However, children were generally more sensitive to both neutral and aversive stimuli, as indexed by affective reports and amygdala responses. At the same time, the transition from childhood to adolescence was marked by a ventral-to-dorsal shift in medial prefrontal responses to aversive, but not neutral, stimuli. Given the role that dmPFC plays in executive control and higher-level representations of emotion, these results suggest that adolescence is characterized by a shift towards representing emotional events in increasingly cognitive terms.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2014

Neural substrates of the development of cognitive control in children ages 5-10 years

Margaret A. Sheridan; Maria Kharitonova; Rebecca E. Martin; Aparna Chatterjee; John D. E. Gabrieli

Cognitive conflict detection and resolution develops with age across childhood and likely supports age-related increases in other aspects of cognitive and emotional development. Little is known about the neural correlates of conflict detection and resolution in early childhood. In the current study, we investigated age-related change in neural recruitment during a blocked spatial-incompatibility task (Simon task) in children ages 5–10 years using fMRI. Cortical thickness was measured using structural MRI. Across all children, there was greater activation in right prefrontal and bilateral parietal cortices for incompatible than compatible conditions. In older children, compared with younger children, there was decreased activation and decreased gray matter thickness in the medial PFC. Thickness and activation changes across age were associated within participants, such that thinner cortex was associated with less activation in the rostral ACC. These findings suggest that developmental change in medial PFC activation supports performance on cognitive control tasks in early childhood.


Current opinion in behavioral sciences | 2016

The neuroscience of emotion regulation development: implications for education

Rebecca E. Martin; Kevin N. Ochsner

Emotion regulation is a critical life skill that can facilitate learning and improve educational outcomes. Developmental studies find that the ability to regulate emotion improves with age. In neuroimaging studies, emotion regulation abilities are associated with recruitment of a set of prefrontal brain regions involved in cognitive control and executive functioning that mature late in development. In this review we discuss the regulation of both negative and positive emotions, the role of other people in guiding our emotional responses, and the potential applications of this work to education.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2018

Social influence shifts valuation of appetitive cues in early adolescence and adulthood.

Rebecca E. Martin; Yvette Villanueva; Theodore Stephano; Peter Franz; Kevin N. Ochsner

Other people can profoundly affect one’s opinions and decisions. In the current study, we compared the effects of peer influence on responses to a primary reward—food—in both young adolescents and adults. Food is critical for survival, and in addition to its rewarding properties, habits and practices surrounding eating are heavily influenced by social and cultural norms. To address the impact of peer influence on food valuations, young adolescents ages 10–14 and young adults ages 18–22 rated the desirability of foods before and after seeing peer opinions about those foods. We then compared the degree to which participants changed their ratings of food desirability as a function of the type of social information received (e.g., peers liking a food more or less than did the participant). We found that all participants’ ratings conformed to the peer ratings and that adolescents had less stable valuations across all conditions over time. These results provide evidence for the effectiveness of peer influence in shifting valuations of appetitive stimuli and can inform interventions aimed at improving healthy eating choices.


Cerebral Cortex | 2016

vlPFC–vmPFC–Amygdala Interactions Underlie Age-Related Differences in Cognitive Regulation of Emotion

Jennifer A. Silvers; Catherine Insel; Alisa Powers; Peter Franz; Chelsea Helion; Rebecca E. Martin; Jochen Weber; Walter Mischel; B.J. Casey; Kevin N. Ochsner


PLOS ONE | 2015

Structural Connectivity of the Developing Human Amygdala

Zeynep M. Saygin; David E. Osher; Kami Koldewyn; Rebecca E. Martin; Amy S. Finn; Rebecca Saxe; John D. E. Gabrieli; Margaret A. Sheridan


Mind, Brain, and Education | 2011

Collaborations in Mind, Brain, and Education: An Analysis of Researcher–Practitioner Partnerships in Three Elementary School Intervention Studies

Rebecca E. Martin; Jennifer S. Groff

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John D. E. Gabrieli

McGovern Institute for Brain Research

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Margaret A. Sheridan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Amy S. Finn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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