Title: Developmental Executive Functions, 5400-001 Class 10, 10/25/05
1Developmental Executive Functions, 5400-001Class
10, 10/25/05
- Principles of Assessment,
- Open-book quiz
2Principles of Assessment
- Concepts for tonight
- Do not build yourself in as the childs PFC
- EF skills are tertiary processing
- Provide a profile of strengths weaknesses
- Differentiate discreet EF components
- Consider developmental expectations
- Crystallized v. fluid intelligence
- Process v. product
- Neuropsych, speech, formal, and informal
3Where is the problem?
4What we usually do
- Traditional tests
- Account for every variable
- Provide scripted instructions
- Eliminate distractions
- Allow for very little novel thinking
- Eliminate opportunity for errors in planning,
sequencing, - Examiner controls order of things
- Examiner establishes goals, objectives
5Why this doesnt work to evaluate executive
function skills.
- Traditional tests prevent us from identifying
- How well child can recognize need to DO something
- Whether or not child can initiate efforts
- If child can establish a plan, find needed
materials, sequence, and predict outcome - If child can manage distractions, impulsivity,
- If child can adapt to changes, manage unfamiliar
problems
6Let the child do the thinking
- In any assessment of EF skills, look for PROCESS
first, OUTCOME second - If YOU become the process, how can you identify
deficits? - Learn how to step back
- Learn how to watch someone fail
- Learn how to wait
7EF skills are tertiary processing
- Rule out other primary or secondary processing
problems - Garbage ingarbage out
- Decision-making is based on quality of input
8Profile strengths weaknesses
- No 2 profiles are the same
- Build on strengths
- Compensate for weaknesses
- Know where to step in and promote development
- Ask WHY they are failing
- Begin to see profiles as you observe children..
9Deficits in underlying cognitive processes.
- (Attention, Inhibition, Working Memory)
- Result in variety of EF deficits
- In reports, group these under EF umbrella for
simplicity - But, must be addressed as foundational skills
upon which everything else is built
10Inattention leads to.
- Poor working memory
- Does not identify relevant information
- Poor goal selection, decision-making
- Overlooks steps, sequences
- Disorganization
- Impaired flexibility, shifting of attention
- Minimal self-awareness, self-correction
11Lack of inhibition contributes to..
- Very poor self-regulation (awareness, monitoring,
judgment, correction) - Ineffective planning, or lack of planning
- Poor selection of behaviors to meet environment
- Poor execution of good intentions
- Behavioral and social disruptions
- Poor emotional control, expression
12Deficits in working memory contribute to
- Ineffective, incomplete storage of info for later
retrieval (poor long term recall) - Ineffective, incomplete immediate reactions and
responses - Inefficient planning, organization
- Disrupted execution of intentions
- Inconsistent initiation of plans
- Poor shifting of set with changes in requirements
13EF-specific deficits
- Foundations of Attention, Inhibition, and Working
Memory allow for EF skills - If these 3 are intact, follow hierarchy of EFs
to help identify breakdown - Hierarchy is relativeskills are simultaneous yet
domino-effect may apply
14Hierarchy of EF skills
- What should I do?
- How should I do this?
- Now I should start
- I should keep working.
- Oh, something has changed!
- Have I done what I intended?
- How is this going, overall?
- Do I need to fix anything?
- Goal selection
- Planning, organization
- Initiation
- Persistence
- Flexibility, shifting
- Execution
- Self-regulation
15How do these children look?
- Look, observe, listen, watch
- These kids can show you a lot with only their
social interactions - Give them a task to execute, or a problem to
solve, - Then watch what happens
16Deficits in Goal Selection (what should I
do/say?)
- Inappropriate behavior
- Poor problem-solving
- May not recognize need to act, say, do
- May not foresee consequences, cannot predict
- May choose poorly, or not at all (relevance)
- Perhaps cannot apply prior experience
- May not be able to regulate emotions well
17Deficits in Planning, Organization (how should I
do this?)
- May not be able to identify what is needed to
accomplish chores, homework, assignments, simple
tasks - May be easily distracted, disorganized,
disorderly, - May be unable to create any plans, or relevant
plans - May demonstrate poor sequencing
- (put butter/jam on bread, THEN in toaster)
18Deficits in initiation, persistence (I must
start, and keep going)
- May tell you what they intend or should do
- May have excellent plans but cannot start
- May shut down entirely, w/no response
- May require physical prompts
- May need specific verb phrases to start
- May need forced choices
- May appear frustrated, silent, angry
- May require frequent prompts to continue
19Deficits in flexibility, shifting(Oh! Something
has changed!)
- May perseverate with unsuccessful strats
- May fail to notice new information
- Trouble adapting, transitioning
- Anger and frustration with imposed changes
- May demonstrate obsessive tendencies
- May fail to recognize environmental cues
- May demonstrate emotional extremes
20Deficits in execution(Did I finish? Is it done?
Is this what Im supposed to do?
- May not realize when they have successfully
completed a task - Likely have impaired self-monitoring
- May be inattentive to task at hand
- May lack time awareness, be unable to adjust
efforts accordingly - May require external motivation to continue,
speed up, stop, etc
21Deficits in Self-Regulation(How is it going
overall?)
- May demonstrate poor self-control, emotional
outbursts, impulsivity, inflexibility - Social, behavioral problems
- Difficulty adapting, fitting in
- May argue deficits with you, or excuse them
- May require constant feedback, proof
- May not know why theyre here
22Deficits in self-regulation, contd
- ORmay identify errors but may not KNOW HOW to
adapt, change, correct - May recognize deficits but may not BE ABLE to
control or minimize behaviors - May even be frustrated with poor self-control
- May not generalize or learn new information well
23So. back to assessment principles
- Profiles will be different
- Show strengths and weaknesses
- Differentiate within EF skills
- Consider developmental expectations
- IQ does not equal EQ
- Combine formal evals, informal observations, and
interviews
24IQ v. EQ
- IQ
- Crystallized intelligence
- World knowledge
- Fund of knowledge
- Often assessed via verbal, vocab
- May also be assessed via visual, non-verbal
- Static demonstration
- EQ
- Fluid intelligence
- Performance
- Use and application
- Planning
- Strategic thinking
- Anticipation, monitoring
- Draw conclusions
- Learn and adapt
25Cattell-Horn-Cattell (CHC) Theory of Intellectual
Processing
- Gc repertoire of educational, cultural
knowledge - Gf fluid, inductive, deductive and novel
reasoning integrates verbal nonverbal - Interpretation of scores is critical
- Process of how scores achieved critical
- Reflects a learning capacity, or style
- Gf-Gc pattern can relate to occupational,
achievement outcomes
26WJ-III (Woodcock, McGrew, Mather, 2001)
- Fluid Reasoning Cluster (Analysis-Synthesis,
Concept Formation) - Planning, application of strategic efforts
- Ability to anticipate outcomes
- Ability to monitor, adapt, inhibit
- Capacity to identify changing rules
- Provides SS, AE, severity levels, iles
27Test options
- Formal assessment tools
- Informal observations
- Interviews
- Rating Scales
28Two areas to assess
- Problem Solving
- EF deficits impact
- novel PSing
- reasoning
- adaptation
- learning/thinking
- overall independence
- Social Interactions
- EF deficits impact
- behavior
- pragmatics
- normal-ness
- conversation
- explanations