“…For adolescents, life events stress generally includes failing exams, transferring or dropping out of school, fighting with classmates, conflicts with family, being discriminated against, having a bad or broken relationship, being punished for truancy, and so on (X. Liu et al, 1997; Xin & Yao, 2015). Life events stress is found to moderate the association between childhood trauma and a wide range of negative development outcomes, such that individuals exposed to greater childhood trauma and recent stress are at greater risk of executive function deficits (Ayesa‐Arriola et al, 2020), and internalizing and externalizing behavior problems such as emotional problems (e.g., anxiety, depression) and suicide ideation and suicide behavior (Duprey et al, 2021; Farmer & Kashdan, 2015; Li et al, 2021; McLaughlin et al, 2010; Miller et al, 2017; Nederhof et al, 2014; Oldehinkel et al, 2014; Rousson et al, 2020; Wade et al, 2019). In addition, life events stress is also found to interact with executive function to affect internalizing and externalizing behavior problems, such that adolescents and young adults who have poor executive function are more likely to suffer anxiety, depression, and aggression when they exposed to recent stress (Clarke, 2011; De Lissnyder et al, 2012; Shields et al, 2017; Sprague et al, 2011; Y. Zhou et al, 2022).…”