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Changes and challenges in 20 years of research into the development of executive functions

Claire Hughes
- 01 May 2011 - 
- Vol. 20, Iss: 3, pp 251-271
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TLDR
A review of 20 years of developmental research on executive functions offers a broad-brushstroke picture that touches on multiple issues including: (i) findings from typical and atypical groups, from infancy to adolescence; (ii) advances in assessment tools and in statistical analysis; (iii) the interplay between EF and other cognitive systems (e.g. those involved in children's developing understanding of mind, and in their processing of reward signals); (iv) integration of cognitive and neuroscience perspectives on EF; and (v) environmental factors that have either a positive influence or a negative
Abstract
This review of 20 years of developmental research on Executive Functions (EF) offers a broad-brushstroke picture that touches on multiple issues including: (i) findings from typical and atypical groups, from infancy to adolescence; (ii) advances in assessment tools and in statistical analysis; (iii) the interplay between EF and other cognitive systems (e.g. those involved in children's developing understanding of mind, and in their processing of reward signals); (iv) integration of cognitive and neuroscience perspectives on EF; and (v) environmental factors that have either a positive influence (e.g. training/intervention programmes; parental scaffolding) or a negative influence (e.g. maltreatment, neglect, traumatic brain injury) on EF. Of the several themes to emerge from this review, two are particularly important; these concern the need to adopt developmental perspectives and the potential importance for intervention work of research on social influences on EF. Specifically, the review highlights both developmental continuities (e.g. in the correlates of EF) and contrasts (e.g. in the nature of EF and its neural substrates) and calls for research that compares developmental trajectories for EF in different groups (e.g. children with autism versus ADHD). In addition, findings from both family-based research and randomized controlled trials of school-based interventions highlight the importance of environmental influences on EF and so support the development of interventions to promote EF and hence improve children's academic and social outcomes. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Evidence for executive dysfunction in autism is discussed in the context of Norman and Shallice's (Centre for Human Information Processing Technical Report 99, 1980) "Supervisory Attentional System" model of frontal function.
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Automatic and controlled processes and the development of addictive behaviors in adolescents: a review and a model.

TL;DR: It is emphasized that adolescent alcohol use primarily takes place in a social context, and that therefore studies should not solely focus on intra-individual factors predicting substance use and misuse but also on interpersonal social factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Normative Data From the Cantab. I: Development of Executive Function Over the Lifespan

TL;DR: This paper addresses issues using the computer-based Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery to identify periods of development in executive capacities using a normative sample of 194 participants ranging in age from 8 to 64 years, providing support for the vulnerability of executive skills to normal aging.
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Executive functions and school readiness intervention: Impact, moderation, and mediation in the Head Start REDI program

TL;DR: The importance of further study of the Neurobiological bases of school readiness, the implications for intervention design, and the value of incorporating markers of neurobiological processes into school readiness interventions are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Object permanence in five-month-old infants

TL;DR: The results of these experiments indicate that, contrary to Piaget's (1954) claims, infants as young as 5 months of age understand that objects continue to exist when occluded and 5-month-old infants realize that solid objects do not move through the space occupied by other solid objects.
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