Links Between Child Executive Function and Adjustment: A Three-Site Study

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Abstract

Cross-site comparisons indicate that East Asian children typically excel on tests of executive function (EF), but interpreting this contrast is made difficult by both the heavy reliance on testing in school settings and by the scarcity of studies that assess across-site measurement invariance. Addressing these gaps, our study included remote home-based assessments of EF for 1002 children (Mage = 5.19 years, SD = 0.51; 49% male) from England, Hong Kong, and mainland China, as well as parental ratings of externalizing and internalizing adjustment problems (data collected between June 2021 and December 2022). The models established partial scalar invariance but did not show clear site differences. Supporting the universal importance of EF for behavioral self-regulation, EF task performance and parent-rated externalizing problems showed similar inverse associations across sites.

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Chen, L. L., Heng, J. A., Xu, C., Ellefson, M. R., Edwards, M., D’Souza, H., … Hughes, C. (2025). Links Between Child Executive Function and Adjustment: A Three-Site Study. Child Development, 96(5), 1590–1604. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.14264

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