Prefrontal Cortex
How the Prefrontal Cortex Shapes Your Child's Development
The prefrontal cortex is the brain's control centre for attention, impulse control, planning, working memory and managing emotions. It matures slowly across childhood and into adolescence, so young children naturally find waiting and self-control hard. Warm relationships, routine, play and sleep help it grow.
The prefrontal cortex is the part of the brain that helps your child pause, plan and choose — and it grows slowly, all through childhood.
In short
The prefrontal cortex sits right behind your child's forehead and acts like the brain's air-traffic control. It guides skills we call executive function — paying attention, controlling impulses, remembering instructions, planning, and managing big feelings. These abilities aren't fixed at birth; they develop gradually across the early years, which is exactly why a young child finds waiting, sharing and switching tasks genuinely hard. With time and supportive practice, this control grows stronger.The science, briefly
The prefrontal cortex is one of the last brain regions to mature, continuing to wire and refine well into late adolescence. In early childhood it is laying the foundations for self-regulation, working memory and flexible thinking. Warm, responsive relationships, predictable routines, play, sleep and back-and-forth conversation all help these connections form — what the WHO and CDC describe as the everyday experiences that build healthy brain architecture. Stress and inconsistency can make this harder; nurturing care makes it easier.When attention, impulse control or emotional regulation seem far behind same-age peers across home and preschool, a developmental check is sensible — to understand, not to label.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an article or app. Learn how this brain region shapes growth on /prefrontal-cortex, explore how we strengthen attention and regulation through /occupational-therapy, and see how progress is measured at /what-is-the-abilityscore-and-how-is-it-calculated.Trusted sources
WHO Nurturing Care Framework on early brain development; CDC milestones on attention and self-control; AAP guidance on executive function and play.Next step — Curious where your child's attention and self-regulation stand? A Pinnacle clinician can help you find out.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
By the preschool years, watch for whether your child can wait briefly, follow a simple two-step instruction, switch between activities, and settle after being upset. Persistent difficulty across both home and preschool is worth a developmental check.
Try this at home
Play simple games that build self-control — 'Simon Says', taking turns, or pausing before a treat. Predictable routines and naming feelings ('you look frustrated') also strengthen this part of the brain through everyday moments.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What does the prefrontal cortex do in children?
It acts as the brain's control centre, guiding attention, impulse control, planning, working memory and emotional regulation — the skills children use to wait, follow instructions and manage feelings.
When does the prefrontal cortex finish developing?
It is one of the slowest brain regions to mature, refining its connections through childhood and into late adolescence. This is why self-control and planning improve gradually with age.
How can I support my child's prefrontal cortex development?
Warm, responsive relationships, predictable routines, plenty of play, good sleep and back-and-forth conversation all help these brain connections form. Turn-taking games build self-control in a fun way.