Cognitive Endurance as Human Capital*

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Brown, Christina; Kaur, Supreet; Kingdon, Geeta; Schofield, Heather
署名单位:
University of Chicago; University of California System; University of California Berkeley; National Bureau of Economic Research; University of London; University College London; Cornell University
刊物名称:
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
ISSN/ISSBN:
0033-5533
DOI:
10.1093/qje/qjae043
发表日期:
2025
页码:
943-1002
关键词:
labor-market outcomes noncognitive skills working-memory test-scores attention fatigue education CHILDREN performance achievement
摘要:
Schooling may build human capital not only by teaching academic skills but by expanding the capacity for cognition. We focus specifically on cognitive endurance: the ability to sustain effortful mental activity over a continuous stretch of time. As motivation, we document that globally and in the United States, the poor exhibit cognitive fatigue more quickly than the rich do across field settings; they also attend schools that offer fewer opportunities to practice thinking for continuous stretches. Using a field experiment with 1,600 Indian primary school students, we randomly increase the amount of time students spend in sustained cognitive activity during the school day-using either math problems (mimicking good schooling) or nonacademic games (providing a pure test of our mechanism). Each approach markedly improves cognitive endurance: students show 22% less decline in performance over time when engaged in intellectual activities-listening comprehension, academic problems, or IQ tests. They also exhibit increased attentiveness in the classroom and score higher on psychological measures of sustained attention. Moreover, each treatment improves students' school performance by 0.09 standard deviations. This indicates that the experience of effortful thinking itself-even when devoid of any subject content-improves general cognitive capacity. Finally, we complement these results with quasi-experimental variation indicating that an additional year of schooling improves cognitive endurance, but only in higher-quality schools. Our findings suggest that schooling disparities may further disadvantage poor children by hampering the development of a core mental capacity.
来源URL: