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Executive functioning in adolescent anorexia nervosa: Neuropsychology versus self- and parental-report
Authors:Laura Rebecca Herbrich  Viola Kappel  Sibylle Maria Winter  Betteke Maria van Noort
Affiliation:Department for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Charité – Universit?tsmedizin Berlin, Humboldt-Universit?t zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Berlin, Germany
Abstract:There is limited research concerning the relationship between neuropsychological assessment and self-report of executive functioning in adolescent anorexia nervosa (AN); available studies demonstrate only low to moderate correlations. Therefore, this study examines the association between neuropsychological test performance and self-report in AN. Forty adolescent inpatients with AN completed an extensive neuropsychological assessment, including set-shifting, central coherence, and questionnaires assessing executive functioning in daily life (BRIEF-SR). Their parents filled out an analog version (BRIEF-PF). Statistical analyses revealed low to medium positive and negative correlations between neuropsychological measures and BRIEF subscales. Similarly, self- and parental ratings were only slightly positively correlated, with patients scoring significantly higher than their parents on two subscales. The results support previous findings of modest correlations between self-report and performance-based testing and emphasize the importance of a multiple format assessment of executive functioning in adolescent AN.
Keywords:Anorexia nervosa  adolescents  neuropsychological performance  executive functioning  self-report
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