The role of experience in adolescent cognitive development: Integration of executive, memory, and mesolimbic systems

•Retrieval of relevant prior experience can facilitate executive function.•Adolescents refine the ability to integrate prior experience to support task behavior.•Hippocampal-prefrontal integration continues to mature throughout adolescence.•Dopamine signaling during adolescence may support hippocamp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2016-11, Vol.70, p.46-58
Hauptverfasser: Murty, Vishnu P., Calabro, Finnegan, Luna, Beatriz
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Retrieval of relevant prior experience can facilitate executive function.•Adolescents refine the ability to integrate prior experience to support task behavior.•Hippocampal-prefrontal integration continues to mature throughout adolescence.•Dopamine signaling during adolescence may support hippocampal-prefrontal integration. Adolescence marks a time of unique neurocognitive development, in which executive functions reach adult levels of maturation. While many core facets of executive function may reach maturation in childhood, these processes continue to be refined and stabilized during adolescence. We propose that this is mediated, in part, by interactions between the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex. Specifically, we propose that development of this circuit refines adolescents’ ability to extract relevant information from prior experience to support task-relevant behavior. In support of this model, we review evidence for protracted structural and functional development both within and across the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex. We describe emerging research demonstrating the refinement of adolescents’ ability to integrate prior experiences to support goal-oriented behavior, which parallel hippocampal-prefrontal integration. Finally, we speculate that the development of this circuit is mediated by increases in dopaminergic neuromodulation present in adolescence, which may underlie memory processing, plasticity, and circuit integration. This model provides a novel characterization of how memory and executive systems integrate throughout adolescence to support adaptive behavior.
ISSN:0149-7634
1873-7528
DOI:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.07.034