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A meta-analysis of the Dimensional Change Card Sort: Implications for developmental theories and the measurement of executive function in children
Resource type
            Journal Article
        Authors/contributors
                    - Doebel, Sabine (Author)
 - Zelazo, Philip David (Author)
 
Title
            A meta-analysis of the Dimensional Change Card Sort: Implications for developmental theories and the measurement of executive function in children
        Abstract
            The Dimensional Change Card Sort (DCCS) is a widely used measure of executive function in children. In the standard version, children are shown cards depicting objects that vary on two dimensions (e.g., colored shapes such as red rabbits and blue boats), and are told to sort them first by one set of rules (e.g., shape) and then by another (e.g., color). Most 3-year-olds persist in sorting by the pre-switch rules, whereas 5-year-olds switch flexibly. We conducted a meta-analysis of standard and experimental versions of the task (Nā=ā69 reports, 426 conditions) to examine the influence of diverse task variations on performance. Age, how the test stimuli were labeled for the child, emphasis on conflict in the verbal introduction of the post-switch rules, and the number of pre-switch trials each independently predicted switching on the standard DCCS, whereas pre-switch feedback, practice, and task modality did not. Increasing the relative salience of the post-switch dimension was associated with higher rates of switching, and, conversely, decreasing post-switch salience was associated with lower rates of switching, and under both kinds of manipulation performance continued to be associated with age. Spatially separating the dimensional values was associated with higher rates of switching, and it was confirmed that the degree of spatial separation matters, with children benefiting most when the dimensional values are fully spatially segregated.Switch rates tended to be higher in versions on which children were prompted to label the stimuli compared to when the experimenter provided labels, and lower when reversal instructions were used in conjunction with the standard task stimuli. Theoretical and practical implications for the study and measurement of executive function in early childhood are discussed.
        Publication
            Developmental Review
        Volume
            38
        Pages
            241-268
        Date
            December 1, 2015
        Series
            Theories of development
        Journal Abbr
            Developmental Review
        Language
            en
        ISSN
            0273-2297
        Short Title
            A meta-analysis of the Dimensional Change Card Sort
        Accessed
            04/11/2019, 16:15
        Library Catalogue
            ScienceDirect
        Extra
            shortDOI: 10/f74vt9
        Citation
            Doebel, S., & Zelazo, P. D. (2015). A meta-analysis of the Dimensional Change Card Sort: Implications for developmental theories and the measurement of executive function in children. Developmental Review, 38, 241–268. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dr.2015.09.001
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