Context in the development of executive functions in children.

Richard Guare
Author Information
  1. Richard Guare: a Seacoast Mental Health Center , Portsmouth , New Hampshire.

Abstract

Assessments of and interventions for executive functions have occupied a central role for neuropsychologists working with children with acquired brain injuries during the past three decades. More recently, awareness has grown about the role that executive functions play for all children and the significant impact they have on behavior and performance in home, school, and community settings. This article posits that demonstration of these functions in a real-world context is the standard by which assessment and intervention strategies should be judged. I then propose that contextually based interventions offer the best probability for meeting this standard. Support for this position is provided by the educational and behavioral literature on learning and transfer and by the neuroscience literature on pattern recognition and embodied cognition.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Child
Cognition
Cognition Disorders
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Executive Function
Humans
Motivation
Self-Help Devices

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0functionsexecutivechildreninterventionsrolecontextstandardliteraturelearningtransferembodiedcognitionAssessmentsoccupiedcentralneuropsychologistsworkingacquiredbraininjuriespastthreedecadesrecentlyawarenessgrownplaysignificantimpactbehaviorperformancehomeschoolcommunitysettingsarticlepositsdemonstrationreal-worldassessmentinterventionstrategiesjudgedproposecontextuallybasedofferbestprobabilitymeetingSupportpositionprovidededucationalbehavioralneurosciencepatternrecognitionContextdevelopmentenvironmentalsupportmotivationtraining

Similar Articles

Cited By