“…Furthermore, SEM techniques are a powerful statistical tool for individual differences research in the fields of working memory (Engle et al, 1999; Kane & Engle, 2002; Ørskov et al, 2021; Rey-Mermet et al, 2019; Shah & Miyake, 1996) and executive functions (Arán Filippetti & Richaud, 2017; Friedman et al, 2008; Schmidt et al, 2017; van der Sluis et al, 2007; Spencer et al, 2020). It comes thus as no surprise that in the last decade many studies have used SEM techniques to investigate executive functions development, their structure, as well as their neural organization (Alfonso & Lonigan, 2021; Brydges et al, 2014; Cirino et al, 2018; Huizinga et al, 2006; Lambek & Shevlin, 2011; Lee et al, 2013; Lerner & Lonigan, 2014; Monette et al, 2015; Montroy et al, 2019; Ritchie et al, 2019; Rose et al, 2012; Usai et al, 2014; Wiebe et al, 2011; Willoughby et al, 2012; Xu et al, 2013). For example, latent variable studies suggest that executive functions develop and differentiate from a rather unitary structure to a multidimensional structure throughout childhood and adolescence.…”