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Executive functioning

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Title: Executive functioning


1
Executive functioning
  • Dr. Elizabeth Sheppard

Developmental Cognitive Neuropsychology (C8CLDC)
Child Clinical Neuropsychology (C8DCHN)
2
Objectives
  • Be able to explain what is meant by executive
    functions (defining/problems)
  • Give examples and explain cognitive tests used to
    test EF
  • Discuss the strengths and limitations of EF
    measures in adults and children
  • Explain how EF develops in typical children
  • Discuss the extent to which adult models of EF
    can be applied to children using evidence from
    typically developing children and children with
    acquired brain lesions

3
What are Executive functions?
  • Set of processes that underlie flexible
    goal-directed behaviour (e.g. planning,
    inhibitory control, attentional
    flexibility,working memory), Bianchi (1922)
  • High-order control processes
  • Domain general i.e. operate across cognitive
    systems/ modalities
  • This definition is provisional under-specified
    we dont know much about this area of cognition!

4
How many components of Executive abilities are
there?
  • Lezak 1995 - Suggests there are 4 components of
    Executive function
  • Volition
  • Planning
  • Purposeful behaviour
  • Effective performance
  • Stuss 1987 - Identifies a number of associated
    skills necessary for goal-directed behaviour
  • Ability to shift from one concept to another
  • Ability to modify behaviour in light of new info
  • Ability to synthesise integrate isolated
    details into coherent whole
  • Ability to manage multiple sources of information
  • Ability to make use of relevant acquired
    knowledge

5

How many components of Executive abilities are
there?
  • Anderson et al. (2001) propose 3 separable but
    unified components of EF
  • 1.)  Attentional control selective attention and
    sustained attention
  • 2.)  Cognitive flexibility working memory,
    attentional shift, self-monitoring, and
    conceptual transfer
  • 3.)  Goal setting initiating, planning and
    organisation, generating and implementing
    strategies for problem solving, and strategic
    behaviour

6
What is Executive Dysfunction (dysexecutive
syndrome)?
  • 1.) Behavioural features - Poor self-control,
    impulsivity, erratic careless responses, poor
    initiation of speech, inflexibility (Lezak, 1995)
  • Case of Phineas Gage quiet family man yard
    long spike forced through his head
  • Memory, language motor functions in tact
  • Complete personality change

7
What is Executive Dysfunction (dysexecutive
syndrome)?
  • 2.) Cognitive features People with Executive
    Dysfunction exhibit poor performance on tasks
    which require one to use Executive Abilities
  • Tasks developed for use with adult participants
    with brain injuries
  • Large range of tasks tapping into various aspects
    of EF

8
Measures of EF - Wisconsin Card Sort
  • Cards vary along several dimensions
  • Sort given feedback infer rule
  • Experimenter changes rule
  • Change strategy infer new rule
  • Involves problem solving cognitive flexibility

9
Measures of EF - Tower of Hanoi
  • Move all hoops from left peg to right peg without
    putting larger hoop on top of smaller
  • Involves attentional shifting, planning,
    inhibition

10
Measures of EF - Stroop Task
  • Read colour words
  • Either congruous or incongruous
  • Take longer if incongruous
  • Involves selective attention inhibition

RED BLUE GREEN YELLOW
RED BLUE GREEN YELLOW
11
Measures of EF - Verbal Fluency Task
  • Generate as many words as possible in one
    minute that begin with the letter N ?
  • Requires the use of a self generated strategy
  • Time limit imposed

12
Measures of EF - Rey Figure Test
  • Copy figure as accurately as possible
  • Accuracy score measures spatial organisation
  • Organisational strategy score measures strategic
    decision making
  • Memory test also used sometimes

13
Measures of EF - Self-ordered Pointing task
  • Present series of arrays with a number of
    different elements
  • Point to different element in each array until
    all pointed to
  • Spatial location of elements changes in arrays
  • Involves working memory and strategic planning

14
Problem with measurements
  • Some question over reliability of measures e.g.
    WCST (Pennington et al.)
  • Discriminant validity the ability to
    discriminate between distinct constructs
  • Tasks tap multiple EF components so unclear which
    EF causes poor performance
  • Tasks also involve non-EF processes so are poor
    at differentiating between EF deficits and non-EF
    deficits

15
What is executive dysfunction?
  • 3). Biological features
  • The Frontal Metaphor
  • Association noted between tasks which involve EF
    processes and damage to the pre-frontal cortex
  • Neuropsychologists may say an individuals
    symptoms look frontal, without knowing the
    nature of the brain damage

16
What is executive dysfunction?
  • Studies documenting effects of frontal lesions
    report heterogeneous range of tasks behaviours
    disrupted
  • But all require goal-directed behaviour, usually
    in novel contexts e.g. Cohen Servan-Schreiber,
    1992
  • Patients with lesions fail despite understanding
    goal of task due to perseveration, impersistence,
    intrusions of task irrelevant behaviour or lack
    of initiative
  • Cannot be attributed to more basic deficit in
    memory, perception or language comprehension

17
What is executive dysfunction?
  • Evidence from neuroimaging and neuroanatomical
    studies suggests that EF processes are associated
    with the PFC (Rakic, Bougeois, Zecevic, Eckenhoff
    Goldman-Rakic, 1986)
  • Strong evidence from PET scan studies showing
    association between WCST and activity in the PFC
    in normal and schizophrenic patients (Weinberger
    et al. 1994)

18
How does executive function relate to IQ?
  • Effects of adult frontal lesions on IQ appear to
    be negligible (Kolb Wishaw, 1990)
  • Frontal lobes may be important for fluid
    intelligence but less important for crystallised
    intelligence
  • Duncan et al. (1995) patients with frontal
    lesions showed disparity between scores on
    Wechsler IQ test Culture Fair IQ test those
    with lesions elsewhere/ no lesions did not

19
Why might damage occur to the PFC?
  • Acquired adulthood
  • Acquired childhood
  • Congenital (developmental disorder)

20
Why study Executive Functioning in children?
  • Are adults and children qualitatively different
    in terms of EF? (frontal metaphor)
  • Some EF behaviours may actually be evident in
    childhood but redundant in adulthood (Smith et
    al., 1992)
  • Gets around discriminant validity problem in
    adult tasks simpler tasks can be used.
  • We need to know about typical development of EF
    skills to help us understand developmental
    disorders that involve EF impairments.

21
Stages of Executive development
  • Frontal lobes originally thought to be
    functionally silent during childhood EFs not
    measurable until second decade
  • This has been refuted now e.g. Diamond Doar
    argue cognitive skills necessary for EF are
    demonstrated in young children
  • Studies have shown frontal activity during even
    infancy
  • e.g. Chugani et al. (1987) measured local
    cerebral metabolic rates of glucose found
    evidence of frontal activation in infants of 6
    months

22
Stages of Executive development
  • Older children make age-related gains on battery
    of EF tasks
  • Levin et al. (1991) gains in concept formation,
    mental flexibility, planning problem solving
  • Researchers agree that EF skills produce
    stage-like development
  • Some EFs appear to mature earlier than others
    supporting multidimensional nature

23
Stages of Executive development
  • Welsh, Pennington Groisser (1991)
  • Studied children aged 3-12 yrs on various EF
    measures argue for 3 distinct developmental
    stages
  • Age 6- Competence with simple planning and
    organised visual search.
  • Age 10- Set maintenance, hypothesis testing, and
    impulse control attained.
  • Adolescence- Complex planning, motor sequencing,
    and verbal fluency
  • In general, greatest development occurs in middle
    childhood with slower development continuing later


24
EF development and frontal lobe development
  • Evidence for direct link between frontal
    development EF from studies of object
    permanence in monkeys
  • Object permanence requires working memory
    inhibition develops in children around 7 months
  • Diamond Goldman-Rakic
  • (1989) animals with lesions
  • to parietal lobes passed A
  • not B task those with frontal
  • lesions did not

25
EF development and frontal lobe development
  • Evidence suggests improvement in EF during
    childhood corresponds with growth spurts in
    frontal lobe development
  • Bell Fox (1992) EEG changes in frontal lobes
    during 1st year of life correlate with length of
    delay for response in delayed response tasks
  • However, some argue EF maturation reflects
    integrity of cerebral development throughout the
    brain or EF maturation dependent on emergence of
    other cognitive abilities (see Anderson et al.)
  • Skill learning approach (similar to interactive
    specialisation account) frontal cortex
    consistently involved in acquisition of new
    skills knowledge from early on in life plays
    role in organising other parts of cortex (e.g.
    Thatcher, 1992)

26
Children with acquired frontal damage case
studies
  • If children with frontal lesions different from
    adults, problems for frontal metaphor
  • Children with acquired frontal damage are rare so
    case study approach used for studying frontal
    injuries in children
  • Therefore, note that limitations of case studies
    apply here
  • Lack of consistent measures across cases
  • Ascertainment biases (bias in sampling
    non-random)
  • Nevertheless case studies produce fairly
    consistent findings
  • N.B. Very important to consider cases within
    developmental perspective

27
Children with acquired frontal damage case
studies
  • Williams Mateer (1992) DR- 811, falling beam
  • - EEG MRI showed damage to frontal region.
  • Failure to maintain intellectual ability after
    injury
  • Social language problems, but Verbal and
    non-verbal memory intact
  • Difficulty with acquisition of new information
  • Little spontaneous activity
  • Tantrums, aggression, unpredictable outbursts,
    impulsivity

28
Children with acquired frontal damage case
studies
  • Williams Mateer (1992) - SN age 11, fell from
    tree
  • - CT scan showed bilateral frontal lobe damage.
  • - Dramatic changes in PIQ
  • - Problems with sustained attention,
    visuo-spatial planning, motor control
  • - Inappropriate problem solving strategies,
    -Verbal reasoning and expressive vocabulary good,
    but not verbal inductive reasoning.
  • - Tantrums, aggressive, inappropriate laughter,
    eating problems

29
Children with acquired frontal damage case
studies
  • Age 12-probs with mental flexibility, sustaining
    attention, verbal fluency, perceptual
    organisation.
  • Age 13-Bi-frontal abnormalities evident (EEG).
    Superior verbal ability, non-compliant behaviour
  • Age 15- probs with inhibiting verbal responses,
    extreme literalness, compulsive attention to
    detail, directing attention, high distractibility.

30
Children with acquired frontal damage case
studies
  • Marlowe (1992) - PL 311, lawn dart
  • Age 5
  • - good intellectual levels
  • - good simultaneous but poor sequential
    processing
  • - Verbal processing excellent, but needed
    instructions repeated extensively
  • Age 6
  • - similar intellectual level (but reduced
    efficiency in learning new info)
  • - A number of other cognitive deficits were
    evident poor anticipatory behaviour, verbal
    understanding, visuo-spatial organisation and
    production, distractible, inhibition problems,
    perseveration.

31
What do childhood case studies tell us?
  • Frontal lesions have dramatic and lasting effects
  • Suggests that effects of frontal lesions are NOT
    silent, temporary, or radically different than
    adults (support frontal metaphor)
  • Severity and time of insult are important
  • - down stream effects
  • Some of the symptoms are similar to those for
    developmental disorders (e.g. conduct disorder,
    ADHD), although they do not meet all criteria
    seems to support frontal metaphor for
    developmental disorders

32
Summary
  • EFs multi-componential processes underlying
    flexible goal-directed behaviour
  • EFs associated with PFC
  • Number of EF tasks/ but problematic
    discriminant validity
  • Child research gets around this to some extent
  • Case studies suggest EFs similar in children and
    adults

33
References
  • Anderson, V., Northam, E., Hendy, J., Wrennall,
    J. (2001). Developmental Neuropsychology A
    Clinical Approach. Hove Psychology Press.
  • Bell, M. A., Fox, N. A. (1992). The relations
    between frontal brain electrical activity and
    cognitive development during infancy. Child
    Development, 63, 1142-1163.
  • Bianchi, L. (1922). The Mechanism of the Brain
    and the Function of the Frontal Lobes. Edinburgh
    Livingstone.
  • Chugani, H. T., Phelps, M. E., Mazziotta, J. C.
    (1987). Positron emission tomography study of
    human brain functional development. Annals of
    Neurology, 22, 287-297.
  • Cohen, J. D., Servan-Schreiber, D. (1992).
    Context, cortex, and dopamine A connectionist
    approach to behavior biology in schizophrenia.
    Psychological Review, 99, 45-77
  • Diamond, A., Doar, B. (1989). The performance
    of human infants on a measure of frontal cortical
    development The delayed response task.
    Developmental Psychology, 22, 271-294
  • Diamond, A., Goldman-Rakic, P. (1989).
    Comparison of human infants and rhesus monkeys on
    Piagets AB task Evidence for dependence of
    dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Experimental
    Brain Research, 74, 24-40.
  • Duncan, J., Burgess, P., Emslie, H. (1995).
    Fluid intelligence after frontal lobe lesions.
    Neuropsychologia, 33, 261-268.

34
References
  • Glosser, G., Goodglass, H. (1990). Disorders in
    executive control functions among aphasic and
    other brain-damaged patients. Journal of Clinical
    and Experimental Neuropsychology, 12, 485-501.
  • Kolb, B., Wishaw, I. Q. (1990). Fundamentals of
    Human Neuropsychology. New York W H Freemont
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  • Levin, H. S., Culhane, K. A., Hartmann, J.,
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    tests of purported frontal lobe functioning.
    Developmental Neuropsychology, 7, 377-395.
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35
References
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