“…Research involving deaf individuals with and without CIs has indicated them frequently to report or demonstrate greater EF difficulties relative to hearing peers (e.g., Hauser, Lukomski, & Hillman, 2008;Hintermair, 2013;Kronenberger, Beer, Castellanos, Pisoni, & Miyamoto, 2014;Pisoni, Conway, Kronenberger, Henning, & Anaya, 2010). Samples of deaf children, adolescents, and young adults have been found to have difficulties (relative to hearing peers) in specific EF domains such as verbal working memory (Hintermair, 2013;Marschark, Sarchet, & Trani, 2016;Kronenberger, Beer et al, 2014;Kronenberger, Pisoni, Henning, & Colson, 2013), controlled fluency speed (controlled attention under time pressure; Kronenberger et al, 2013), inhibition versus impulsivity (Figueras, Edwards, & Langdon, 2008;Kronenberger et al, 2013), and concept formation (Castellanos et al, 2015;Figueras et al, 2008;Kronenberger, Beer et al, 2014). Other EF areas such as flexibility/shifting (Figueras et al, 2008;Hintermair, 2013;Kronenberger, Beer et al, 2014) and emotional control (Hintermair, 2013;Kronenberger, Beer et al, 2014) may be affected, although there is some inconsistency in findings for these domains particularly at young ages (Kronenberger, Beer et al, 2014).…”