Miller-Executive Function 1



Similar documents
Executive Function Dysfunction: The Newest Learning Disability. Karen J. Miller, MD Floating Hospital for Children Tufts Medical Center Boston, MA

Chapter 4: Eligibility Categories

Executive functions: Stuss model

Attention, memory and learning and acquired brain injury. Vicki Anderson. Jamie M. Attention & learning: an information processing model

Executive Function Capacities:

KIDS IN THE SYNDROME MIX OF ADHD, LEARNING DISORDERS, AUTISM SPECTRUM, ANXIETY, TOURETTE S, AND MORE!

Executive Functions: Developing an Independent Learner NOVEMBER 12, 2014 KATHLEEN BRUNSWICK, MA JEFFREY A. DETESO, PH.D.

Neuropsychiatry Disorders

Presented by the National Resource Center on ADHD

Executive Functions: From Assessment to Intervention

Diagnostic Criteria. Diagnostic Criteria 9/25/2013. What is ADHD? A Fresh Perspective on ADHD: Attention Deficit or Regulation?

ADDRESSING EXECUTIVE FUNCTION: A GUIDE FOR PARENTS OF CHILDREN WITH NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-1. StLouisChildrens.org

For more than 100 years, extremely hyperactive

The Thirteen Special Education Classifications. Part 200 Regulations of the Commissioner of Education, Section 4401(1)

Executive functioning SLP s Will Want To Know About This! The human brain 9/22/15. Executive Skill Definition Examples

From A to Z Successfully: Susan E. Hutaff Bonnie S. Henry Speech-Language Pathologists

ASPERGER S SYNDROME, NONVERBAL LEARNING DISORDER AND OTHER NEUROCOGNITIVE DISORDERS

Paying Attention to Executive Functioning. Charlene J Barva PhD RPsych Calgary Board of Education. Kelly Schwartz PhD RPsych University of Calgary

Practice Test for Special Education EC-12

THE OVERLAP BETWEEN ADHD AND LEARNING DISABILITIES

District Rosemount/Apple Valley/Eagan Revised May 2006 Special Education Department QUICK GUIDE OF EDUCATIONAL DISABILITIES

AD/HD Is a Developmental Disability Mary Durheim

Strategies to Address Weak Executive Functioning Skills. Melissa Trautman, M.S. Ed Southeast ASD Regional Coordinator

Documentation Requirements ADHD

MCPS Special Education Parent Summit

UCLA-NPI/VA PG-2 Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Course Week 3:Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

Social Service Agencies. Programs for Schools & Music Therapy. Outreach

Clinical Practice Guidelines: Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Dr. Varunee Mekareeya, M.D., FRCPsychT. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

65G Eligibility for Agency Services Definitions. (1) Autism means any condition which is part of the autism spectrum disorder and which meets

The core symptoms of ADHD, as the name implies, are inattentiveness, hyperactivity and impulsivity. These are excessive and long-term and

Nonverbal Learning Disabilities

3030. Eligibility Criteria.

SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITY

Executive Function and Student Success Karen Boutelle Associate Director

Amicus Trust have been providing support to vulnerable people for over 40 years

Managing Executive Function Disorders. Donna Geffner, Ph.D., CCC-Sp/A St. John s s University, NY ASHA Convention 2007

PSYCHOLOGICAL AND NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL TESTING

WHAT IS COGNITIVE INTERVENTION/REHABILITATION?

2014 ADHD Conference Presentation Descriptions

The Role of Executive Functions in Childhood Learning and Behavior

AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS

Patricia Beldotti, Psy.D. Tel: Web:

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder: a pharmacological treatment approach

ADHD and Autism (and everything else in between) Dr Ankit Mathur Consultant Community Paediatrician

Traumatic Brain Injury and Incarceration. Objectives. Traumatic Brain Injury. Which came first, the injury or the behavior?

CRITICALLY APPRAISED PAPER (CAP)

Special Education Coding Criteria 2012/2013. ECS to Grade 12 Mild/Moderate (including Gifted and Talented) Severe

Grade: 11 th & 12 th grade, Psychology TEKS Guiding Questions Content Vocabulary Resources/Lesson Ideas

Comprehensive Special Education Plan. Programs and Services for Students with Disabilities

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR) (APA, 2001) 10

The Role of Executive Functions in Childhood Learning and Behavior. George McCloskey. Plain Talk About Reading February 9-11, 2015 New Orleans

[KQ 804] FEBRUARY 2007 Sub. Code: 9105

The Planning and Execution Assistant and Trainer (PEAT) The challenge of impaired executive functions

Working Memory & Processing Speed in the Classroom. Steven M. Butnik, Ph. D., LCP ADDVANTAGE, PLLC Richmond, Virginia

The Executive Teacher Program

A Guide for Enabling Scouts with Cognitive Impairments

ROLE OF SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGIST AS A RELATED SERVICE PROVIDER

Executive. Presented by Patti Jenks Principal, ASSETS High School

DISABILITY-RELATED DEFINITIONS

Why study clinical neuropsychology?

REHABILITATION OF EXECUTIVE DISORDERS

Smart Isn t Everything: The Importance of Neuropsychological Evaluation for Students and Individuals on the Autism Spectrum

Development of Chemical Dependency in Adolescents & Young Adults. How to recognize the symptoms, the impact on families, and early recovery

Interview for Adult ADHD (Parent or Adult Questionnaire)

Billy. Austin 8/27/2013. ADHD & Bipolar Disorder: Differentiating the Behavioral Presentation in Children

Case Study: Jane Dhillon. 2. Why do I think Jane has a non-verbal learning disability?

Charles A. Nelson III Children s Hospital Boston/Harvard Medical School Harvard Center on the Developing Child

Towards Developing a Manual for Residential Treatment Centers to Support Individuals with an FASD and Their Families

ADHD A Focus on the Brain

Universal Design for Learning: Best Practice in Inclusive Education

ADHD. & Coexisting Disorders in Children

Alyson H. Sheehan, PhD - ASPIRE Center

University of St. Thomas Health Services and Counseling ADD/ADHD Guidelines

Executive Function in Context: The Role of Stress and Vulnerability and Opportunities for Intervention. Stephanie M. Jones

Memory, Behaviour, Emotional and Personality Changes after a Brain Injury

Memory Development and Frontal Lobe Insult

Assessing families and treating trauma in substance abusing families

Metacognitive Strategies for Adolescents with an FASD Marnie Hutchison, MEd Jacqueline Pei, PhD Kimberly Kerns, PhD Carmen Rasmussen, PhD Kennedy

Asperger s Syndrome & Nonverbal Learning Disabilities

Supporting Students with ADHD

Tiltak for barn og unge med ADHD

Tourette syndrome and co-morbidity

Learning Disabilities: 101

Child & Youth Development in a Child Welfare Context. Goals

Special Education Coding Criteria 2014/2015. ECS to Grade 12 Mild/Moderate Gifted and Talented Severe

Children with Executive Functioning Deficits

School-based Interventions for Executive Function Following Childhood Traumatic Brain Injury

Neuropharmacologic Agents for Treatment of Cognitive Impairment After Brain Injury

Criteria for Entry into Programs of Special Education for Students with Disabilities

Depression and Mental Health:

ATTENTION DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER AND TUBEROUS SCLEROSIS COMPLEX

Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function BRIEF. Interpretive Report. Developed by. Peter K. Isquith, PhD, Gerard A. Gioia, PhD, and PAR Staff

BRIEF NOTES ON THE MENTAL HEALTH OF CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS

Drugs PSYCHOSIS. Depression. Stress Medical Illness. Mania. Schizophrenia

SELF-REGULATION. Keys to Understanding and Help

What is ADHD/ADD and Do I Have It?

IMPROVING YOUR EXPERIENCE

How are Parts of the Brain Related to Brain Function?

Crosswalk to DSM-IV-TR

Transcription:

Miller-Executive Function 1 Karen J. Miller, MD: disclosure slide Executive Function Dysfunction: The Newest Learning Disability No financial disclosures No conflicts of interest Karen J. Miller, MD Boston, MA kmiller7@tuftsmedicalcenter.org Why talk about Executive Function? Basic Areas of Brain Hot topic Superior Anterior Posterior Key component of many disorders Key component of daily life problems Impacts clinical care and adherence Your understanding drives your intervention (Ross Greene) Inferior

Miller-Executive Function 2 New thinking is EFFORTFUL Executive Functions definition Naïve Practiced Novel Verb Generation task PET scans -Raichle 1994 Variety of higher-order mental processes and behaviors Enables self-regulation, problem-solving and execution of goal directed behavior Integrates with lower-level processes Develop gradually over time Executive Function Dysfunction Universal experience Experience dependent (expertise) Increased in: Illness and fatigue states Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Autism Spectrum Disorders Learning Disability Side effects of medications Drugs or alcohol Fetal Alcohol syndrome Executive Function Dysfunction-2 Brain Injury (traumatic or acquired) Brain disorder (e.g. dementia, tumors) Partial complex epilepsy, frontal origin Mental illness (e.g. schizophrenia, depression, bipolar, OCD) Tic disorders Genetic disorders Phenylketonuria, Turner syndrome, William s syndrome Velocardiofacial syndrome, Metachromatic leukodystrophy, Neurofibromatosis, Wilson Disease

Miller-Executive Function 3 Basic Neurological Functions Exec Function: Metacognition Exec Function: Self-Regulation Basic Neurological Functions Basic Neurological functions- WHAT happens NOW Physiological functions Sensory functions Speech/Language Spatial Motor Memory of skills Memory of facts Basic Executive Function- Not What but How and When EF metaphors Round-A composition for two or more voices in which each voice enters at a different time with the same melody Row,Row,Row Your Boat Row, row, row your boat Gently down the stream Merrily, merrily, merrily Life is but a dream Conductor CEO Director Pilot Cook

Miller-Executive Function 4 Executive Functions- Closer look at some components Self-Regulatory functions Inhibition Shift/Flexibility Emotional Regulation Metacognitive functions Working Memory Problem-solving Monitoring Basic Executive Functions- Self-Regulation of NOW Inhibition Behavioral Cognitive Shift/Flexibility Emotional Regulation BRIEF rating scale Gioia et al,2000 EF- Balancing between Inhibition and Initiation Basic EF Dysfunctions- Inhibition STOP! GO! Ability to INHIBIT is the gateway to other EFs Deficits in behavioral inhibition Impulsive, can t stop when asked Deficits in cognitive inhibition Daydreams, off topic Deficit associated with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Barkley, 2000

Miller-Executive Function 5 Stroop Task Say the COLOR of the ink: GREEN RED YELLOW BLUE RED BLUE BLACK YELLOW BLACK GREEN Basic EF Dysfunctions- Shift/Flexibility Deficits ADAPT as new information presents Shifts too quickly Distractible, Doesn t finish Associated with AD/HD Shifts too slowly Daydreams, off-topic comments Associated with ADHD Inattentive Rigid, Perseverative Associated with Autism spectrum Basic EF Dysfunctions- Emotional Regulation Deficits Ability to inhibit allows modification of emotional expression, selection of adaptive emotional response and activate emotion if needed. Self-regulation of affect (Barkley 1997,2000) Deficits can present as: Over-emotional, over-sensitive, immature, moody, easily frustrated Inability to pump up, unenthusiastic METACOGNITION - Managing LATER Working Memory Problem-solving Monitoring

Miller-Executive Function 6 Meta-cognition: Non-Verbal Working Memory mental work space scratch-pad Non-verbal WM enables Hindsight, foresight Mental representations Pattern recognition Sense of time and events in time Deficits result in: Poor time management, not learning from past, difficulty reading facial expressions, poorly sequenced behavior, social incompetence, misplacing items, clumsiness, problems in math Associated with Non-Verbal LD Meta-cognition: Verbal Working Memory Holds language on-line while processing, manipulating or waiting Self-talk Rule-governed behavior/reasoning Deficits result in: Forgetfulness, careless errors, comprehension problems, rude behavior Associated with learning disabilities, language disorders, AD/HD Meta-cognition: Problem-solving Problem-solving components Prioritizing/goal selection Analysis/synthesis ( reconstitution ) Strategy development and selection Planning/Organization Deficits result in problems in: Completing tasks efficiently, organizing materials, formulating responses, sequencing activities, balancing work/leisure, coping with adversity, managing longterm tasks Meta-cognition: Monitoring and Motivation Task Monitoring Is it done? Is it done right? Self-Monitoring Social feedback Introspection/self-awareness: WHY DO IT? Deficits result in: Poor quality of work, poor pacing Egocentric, socially clueless Over- or under-estimating abilities/skills Motivation; self-activation Disorganization; incompleteness Barkley 1997,2000

Miller-Executive Function 7 Development of EF Organization / Executive Function Control in ADHD and other EF dysfunctions 7-8 months Demonstrates working memory 3 years Begins ability to inhibit disadvantageous decision 6 years Attention becomes volitional Adolescence Manipulate and integrate complex information Effectiveness Productive Efficient Accurate Inconsistent Inefficient Limited output Typical EF Deficit Powell KB, Voeller Kytja KS. J of Child Neuro. 2004 Simple Task Demands Complex Cortical thinning of attention and executive function networks in adults with ADHD Makris N, Biederman J, Valera EM et al; Cerebral Cortex 2007; 17(6):1264-75 ADHD - overall cortical thinning especially in dorsolateral preforontal, anterior cingulate, posterior cingulate and inferior parietal (angular gyrus) Assessment of EF Medical Psychiatric/Behavioral Psychological/Educational Neuropsychological Cultural Context

Miller-Executive Function 8 Assessment of EF- Neuropsychological Testing Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-4 th edition WISC IV (working memory) Delis-Kaplan executive function system NEPSY subtests Rey Complex Figure Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) Attention Deficit Disorder Scales BOTTOM LINE: Where is the breakdown? Is there a knowledge deficit? Is there a procedural skill deficit? Is it a cultural difference in expectation? Is it an Executive Function deficit? Inhibition/Initiation Shift/Flexibility Emotional Regulation Working Memory Problem-solving/Organization Monitoring EF Intervention: Adopt an EF Lifestyle EF is learned in day to day activities with real life problems EF is developed by modeling and supported practice Keep an EF mindset when engaging in tasks and externalize the process Actions speak louder than words (Model) Talk aloud about: WHAT you want to do (Goals) HOW you are going do it (Process) WHAT IF things go wrong (Plan B) NEXT TIME I ll (Monitoring) EF Intervention: Medical and Medication Medical Sleep, nutrition, medical problems Medication Attention problems Stimulants, atomoxetine, guanfacine Improves with self-regulation and focus in the moment; not metacognition or management of LATER Emotional problems Anxiety, aggression, mood disorder WRITE IT DOWN (Externalize brain)

Miller-Executive Function 9 EF Intervention: School issues Executive function not an special education disability category Special Education categories (partial list) LD, Autism, ADHD (under Other Health Impaired), Neurological, Communication Emerging understanding of executive function Accommodations Skill development Adult support Coaching Summary: Where did I put my head? Executive functions are late developing, higher order cognitive processes EF delays/deficits are common EF remediation involves Modifying the environment Structured practice Sometimes medication Collaborative approach needed We all experience EF moments Resources Supplemental Slides Dawson, P, Guare R. Smart by Scattered: the revolutionary Executive Skills approach to helping kids reach their potential.(2009) Guilford Press, NY www.guilford.com; for parents Ziegler Dendy CA. Teaching Teens with ADD and ADHD: A Quick Reference Guide for Teachers and Parents. 2000.Bethesda: Woodbine House; The Disorganized Mind: Coaching your ADHD brain to take control of your tasks, time, and talents, The New Self-Coaching Book for ADHD Adults by Nancy Ratey, Ed. M. St. Martin s Press, 2008,for more information on self-coaching www.thedisorganizedmind.com

Miller-Executive Function 10 Resources-2 http://www.aboutkidshealth.ca/ofhc/news/sref/4144.asp for series of parent-oriented articles on developmental perspectives on executive function. CH.A.D.D (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders). Information, parent support and resource for professionals. website www.chadd.org, The federally funded National Resource Center (NRC) website, http://www.help4adhd.org, toll-free number (800-233- 4050); English and Spanish. Miller KJ. Executive Functions. Pediatric Annals.2005;34(4):310-317 Powell KB, Voeller Kytja KS. Prefrontal Executive Functions Syndromes in Children. J of Child Neuro. 2004;19(10); 785-797