“…There also may be other aspects of executive functioning that underlie developmental improvement on rule-based category learning tasks (e.g., set-shifting), though we are aware of no studies that have demonstrated this specifically. Several studies have shown that children and adults with DS perform below their developmental level on a variety of tasks measuring inhibition (e.g., Atkinson & Braddock, 2012; Borella, Carretta, & Lanfranchi, 2013; Kogan et al, 2002; Lanfranchi, Jerman, Dal Pont, Alberti, & Vianello, 2010; Rowe, Lavender, & Turk, 2006; Wilding, Cornish, & Munir, 2002; but see Carney, Brown, & Henry, 2013; Lee et al, 2011; Pennington, Moon, Edgin, Stedron, & Nadel, 2003; Randolf & Burack, 2000) and working memory (e.g., Carney et al, 2013; Lanfranchi, Cornoldi, & Vianello, 2004; Lanfranchi, Jerman, & Vianello, 2009; Lanfranchi et al, 2010; Munir, Cornish, & Wilding, 2000; Vicari, Carlesimo, & Caltagirone, 1995; but see Edgin, Pennington, & Mervis, 2010). Although few studies have examined set-shifting directly in DS, some evidence points to special difficulty in this skill (Carney et al, 2013; Lanfranchi et al, 2010; Rowe et al, 2006).…”