“…These statistics are concerning because excessive alcohol use during adolescence is associated with a myriad of negative consequences including alcohol and substance use disorders (AUD, SUD; Dwyer‐Lindgren et al, 2018), and other mental health problems (Pompili et al, 2010; Teesson et al, 2010; Welsh et al, 2017). Alcohol use during adolescence has also been associated with alterations in brain structure and function, including aberrant activation patterns during response inhibition tasks (for review, see Lees et al, 2020; Lees et al, 2019; Squeglia and Cservenka, 2017; Squeglia and Gray, 2016), as well as poorer test performance across cognitive domains, with executive functions and memory being the most vulnerable (Gould, 2010; Lees et al, 2019). Recent longitudinal neuroimaging studies have begun investigating, and have shown, that underlying neural vulnerabilities of response inhibition in substance‐naïve children appear to contribute to earlier initiation and problematic progression of alcohol use during adolescence (Squeglia and Cservenka, 2017).…”