First and Last Name/s of Presenters

Megan BarlowFollow

Mentor/s

N/A

Participation Type

Poster

Abstract

Executive Functions (EFs) are a critical aspect of advanced human mental processing and higher-order functioning. The performance of EFs within adults was evaluated to examine the extent that reward presence and participant reward sensitivity influences such EFs performance. Previous research has indicated that the presence of a reward to children with low reward sensitivity tended to exhibit improved EFs when compared to children with high reward sensitivity. Similar trends were illustrated within studies on adults participants and urged for further exploration. Participants completed a Reward-Responsiveness Scale via a self-report survey to be designated as either "high" or "low" reward sensitivity, and were then tasked to complete a Color-Word Stroop Task both in the presence of and without a reward. Results indicated contrary to previous trends that the presence of a reward and participant reward sensitivity did not demonstrate improved EFs performance in participants. These findings did not indicate a relationship between reward presence and reward sensitivity with EFs as previously hypothesized, but provided insight into the innerworkings of EFs as a whole.

College and Major available

College of Arts and Sciences, Psychology BS

Academic Level

Undergraduate student

Location

Digital Commons & West Campus West Building University Commons

Start Day/Time

4-25-2025 12:00 PM

End Day/Time

4-25-2025 2:00 PM

Students' Information

Megan Barlow, Psychology, Honors, May 2025

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License

Prize Categories

Best Visuals, Most Creative, Best Writing

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Apr 25th, 12:00 PM Apr 25th, 2:00 PM

The Influence of Reward and Reward Sensitivity on Executive Functioning in Adults

Digital Commons & West Campus West Building University Commons

Executive Functions (EFs) are a critical aspect of advanced human mental processing and higher-order functioning. The performance of EFs within adults was evaluated to examine the extent that reward presence and participant reward sensitivity influences such EFs performance. Previous research has indicated that the presence of a reward to children with low reward sensitivity tended to exhibit improved EFs when compared to children with high reward sensitivity. Similar trends were illustrated within studies on adults participants and urged for further exploration. Participants completed a Reward-Responsiveness Scale via a self-report survey to be designated as either "high" or "low" reward sensitivity, and were then tasked to complete a Color-Word Stroop Task both in the presence of and without a reward. Results indicated contrary to previous trends that the presence of a reward and participant reward sensitivity did not demonstrate improved EFs performance in participants. These findings did not indicate a relationship between reward presence and reward sensitivity with EFs as previously hypothesized, but provided insight into the innerworkings of EFs as a whole.

 

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