Emergent blink rate in early childhood is associated with neural origins of executive function

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Abstract

Executive function develops rapidly in early childhood and predicts later success in life, yet its neurobiological correlates during this period remain poorly understood. In adults, executive function is supported by prefrontal–striatal circuits under neuromodulatory control, including dopamine. Here, we show that spontaneous eye-blink rate (sEBR), a physiological output influenced by neuromodulatory systems, is associated with the developmental trajectory of executive function and prefrontal functional differentiation. We used fNIRS to monitor prefrontal cortex (PFC) activation in 113 children (35–80 months) during a cognitive flexibility task. With increasing age, the children’s task performance improved, and their PFC activation showed greater right-hemisphere and dorsal bias, reflecting functional differentiation. Importantly, higher sEBR was also associated with this right-dorsal PFC activation and with better task performance. The current findings demonstrate that emergent sEBR is associated with the neural origins of executive function development in young children. This highlights the potential of sEBR to serve as a unique and previously unrecognised indicator of this critical developmental neural mechanism.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00