2012
DOI: 10.3109/02699052.2012.666366
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Ecological assessment of cognitive functions in children with acquired brain injury: A systematic review

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Cited by 91 publications
(65 citation statements)
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References 114 publications
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“…Those ecological assessments of EF have been summarised recently by Chevignard, Soo, Galvin, Catroppa, and Eren (2012). Overall, three approaches have been used.…”
Section: Assessment Of Executive Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Those ecological assessments of EF have been summarised recently by Chevignard, Soo, Galvin, Catroppa, and Eren (2012). Overall, three approaches have been used.…”
Section: Assessment Of Executive Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among these, the BRIEF (Gioia et al, 2000) has been widely used in children with developmental, congenital or acquired brain conditions. It has good psychometric properties in ABI (for a review, see Chevignard et al, 2012;Gioia, Kenworthy, & Isquith, 2010). Parrish et al (2007) found that the BRIEF questionnaire, used to assess executive functioning in 53 children aged 8-18 years with recent onset epilepsy, was a better predictor of performance on the DKEFS (a battery of nine neuropsychological tests designed to assess EF) (Delis, Kaplan, & Kramer, 2001) than the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) which is a parent-completed questionnaire that examines a broad spectrum of childhood behavioural and emotional problems (Achenbach, 1991).…”
Section: Assessment Of Executive Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…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.…”
Section: Please Scroll Down For Articlementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Assessment issues have been raised regarding the ecological validity of the attention batteries as well as their sensitivity in taping the developmental trends in school age population. Specifically, traditional paper-and-pencil assessment tools have the advantage to mimic real world situations (Chevignard, Soo, Galvin, & Catroppa, 2012), but administration and performance recording heavily depend on the examiner's experience. Computerized evaluation, instead, offers time accuracy, reliable, randomized presentation (Schatz & Browndyke, 2002) and can override the immature verbal abilities of younger children through its button pressing requirements.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%