Young, Ethan2017-10-092017-10-092017-05https://hdl.handle.net/11299/190575University of Minnesota M.A. thesis. May 2017. Major: Psychology. Advisor: Jeffry Simpson. 1 computer file (PDF); v, 72 pages.Although growing up in an adverse childhood environment tends to impair cognitive functions, evolutionary-developmental theory suggests otherwise. In particular, a person’s mind may become developmentally specialized and potentially enhanced for solving problems in the types of environments in which the person grew up. In the current studies, we tested whether these specialized advantages in cognitive function might be sensitized to emerge in currently uncertain contexts. We refer to this as the sensitized-specialization hypothesis. We conducted experimental tests of this hypothesis in the domain of working memory, examining how growing up in unpredictable versus predictable environments affects different facets of working memory. Although growing up in an unpredictable environment typically impairs working memory, we show that this type of environment has positive effects on those aspects of working memory that are useful in rapidly changing environments. We also show that growing up in predictable environments enhances those aspects of working memory that are useful in stable environments. Both of these effects emerged only when the current context was uncertain. These theoretically-derived findings suggest that childhood environments shape, rather than uniformly impair, cognitive functions.enevolutionary psychologylife history theorysocial developmentunpredictable environmentsworking memoryCan an Unpredictable Childhood Environment Enhance Working Memory? Testing the Sensitized-Specialization HypothesisThesis or Dissertation