“…EFs have been identified as mechanisms involved in successful adaptation to stress (Compas, 2006), and the interrelation between coping strategies and EFs across the life span is accepted (e.g., Andreotti et al., 2013; Campbell et al., 2009; Connor-Smith et al., 2000; Evans, Kouros, Samanez-Larkin, & Garber, 2015; Fletcher et al., 2011; Gotlib & Joorman, 2010; Schmeichel & Tang, 2015). This relation has been analyzed in different studies, for example, in samples of children and adolescents with depressive symptoms (Evans et al., 2015; Morris, Evans, Rao, & Garber, 2015), in adult patients with neuropsychiatric symptoms after acquired brain injury (Gregório et al., 2015), in persons with multiple sclerosis (Grech et al., 2016), or in returning war veterans (Martindale et al., 2016). However, to the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to compare executive functioning (inhibition and WM tasks), short-term memory, and adoption of coping strategies (avoidance vs. approach) in a sample of young and older adults without prior diagnosis of depression and with normal cognitive function.…”