“…Since publication in 2000, the BRIEF has been widely used in school and clinical settings as well as in a wide variety of research studies involving children and adolescents who are typically developing and those with developmental disorders, medical illness, neurological disorders, and psychiatric disorders (for review, see Isquith, Roth, & Gioia, 2013;. It is one of the most sensitive measures to attention deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; Reddy, Hale, & Brodzinsky, 2011;Toplak, Bucciarelli, Jain, & Tannock, 2008) and to changes following brain injury (Chevignard, Soo, Galvin, Catroppa, & Eren, 2012), has been widely used to assess outcome following a variety of interventions (Isquith, Roth, Kenworthy & Gioia, 2014) and is associated with academic performance (for review, see Roth et al, 2014). There are over 400 peer-reviewed publications supporting the reliability, validity, and clinical utility of the BRIEF.…”