“…Models of attention (Gilboa et al, 2015;Limond, Adlam & Cormack, 2014;Mirsky, Anthony, Duncan, Ahearn & Kellam, 1991) distinguish between various aspects of attentional skills, including sustained attention (i.e., vigilance), selective attention (i.e., focusing on relevant stimuli and ignoring irrelevant stimuli), shifting attention (i.e., changing attentional focus in an adaptive and flexible manner), divided attention (i.e., dividing attention between two or more sources of information), attentional control (i.e., ability to inhibit responses), and speed of processing (i.e., rate of completing responses). There is substantial evidence that children with ABI are vulnerable to deficits in each of these domains (McKay et al, 2019;van't Hooft, Andersson, Sejersen, Bartfai & von Wendt, 2003). For example, in a sample of 71 children with TBI, Catroppa and Anderson (2005) showed deficits on measures of sustained, selective, and shifting attention, as well as slowed processing speed, particularly for children with more severe injuries.…”