“…fNIRS is a non-invasive, optical imaging technique that uses near-infrared light to measure the haemodynamic response; increases of oxygenated haemoglobin and decreases in deoxygenated haemoglobin concentrations in the cortex of the brain. Evidencing the feasibility and growing popularity of this technique in developmental research, growing numbers of studies are using fNIRS to investigate the neural correlates of EF in preschool and school-age children (Buss et al, 2014;Kerr-German & Buss, 2020;Monden et al, 2015;Moriguchi et al, 2018;Reyes et al, 2020;Wijeakumar et al, 2019;Yanaoka et al, 2020). Studies using fNIRS to investigate response inhibition in this age group have found increased right lateral PFC activation when inhibition was successful (Moriguchi and Shinohara, 2019), and that children and adults showed activation in the same areas (right PFC and parietal cortex) where inhibition was required, although children had a more immature response pattern (Mehnert et al, 2013).…”