Engage the upstairs brain through curiosity and play

Ask questions that require the child to think, imagine, or consider another perspective.

Why it works

The prefrontal cortex develops through use: asking a child to imagine another person’s feelings, consider consequences, or think of a creative solution is literally exercise for the circuits responsible for empathy, impulse control, and decision-making. Playful engagement of these capacities during calm moments builds the neurological infrastructure that the child draws on during emotional storms.

How to do it

  1. During calm moments, ask perspective-taking questions: "How do you think your friend felt when that happened?"
  2. Use what-if games: "What would you do if…?"
  3. After resolving a conflict, invite the child to explain why something felt unfair and how it might be solved differently.
  4. Praise the reasoning process, not just the answer: "That was really thoughtful."

Evidence

Executive function and perspective-taking develop through practice across childhood; structured challenges to these capacities support their development, consistent with use-dependent neural development principles. (mechanistic)

Use-dependent cortical development is well established; that specific parenting questions build these circuits is a principled inference rather than a directly studied causal claim.

Sources

  • Diamond, A. (2013). Executive functions. Annual Review of Psychology, 64, 135–168.

Common mistake

Posing perspective-taking questions during or immediately after a conflict, when the upstairs brain is still offline — these exercises only build capacity when the child is calm enough to access the circuits you’re training.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach suggests age-appropriate perspective-taking and curiosity exercises drawn from your child’s actual interests, so upstairs-brain practice happens in engaging rather than dry contexts.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).