The predictive validity of performance on cognitive-behavioral measures of executive function (EF) suggests that these measures index children's underlying capacity for self-regulation. In this paper, we apply ecological systems theory to critically evaluate this assertion. We argue that as typically administered, standard measures of EF do not index children's underlying, trait-like capacity for EF, but rather assess their state-like EF performance at a given point in time and in a particular (and often quite peculiar) context. This underscores the importance of disentangling intra-individual (i.e., state-like) and inter-individual (trait-like) differences in performance on these measures and understanding how factors at various levels of organization may contribute to both. To this end, we offer an approach that combines the collection of repeated measures of EF with a multilevel modeling framework, and conclude by discussing the application of this approach to the study of educational interventions designed to foster children's EF.
Effortful control (EC) is characterized by regulatory strategies that contribute to patterns of (mal)adaptation across development. Deficits in EC pose risk for externalizing psychopathology, but whether and how subfactors of EC differentially influence children’s conduct problems (CP), attention deficit disordered behaviors (ADD), and callous-unemotional (CU) traits remains unknown. Research on EC may benefit from alternative modeling strategies that allow for comparisons of overall EC scores and its subfactors in the prediction of externalizing outcomes. The current study uses a bi-factor structural equation modeling approach to examine if general EC and its subfactors (i.e., attentional focusing, low-intensity pleasure, perceptual sensitivity, inhibitory control) at 36 months differentially predict CP, ADD, and CU traits at 84 months. Using a longitudinal sample of 206 children followed from age three to seven years (47.8% female, 42.6% European-American), results indicated that increased general EC at 36 months predicted reduced CU traits and ADD at 84 months. Attentional focusing was the only subfactor to uniquely predict later CU traits, suggesting that attentional abilities hold particular significance for buffering against psychopathy. Findings are interpreted in the context of methodological and theoretical significance for future developmental research, as well as implications for interventions targeting regulatory strategies in early childhood.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.