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RDoC cognitive systems and emerging psychopathology: A latent variable analysis of teacher-reported psychosocial difficulties and executive function processes in young children.

Created on 07 Jul 2026

Authors

Steve Eaton, Stephanie H M van Goozen

Published in

Psychological medicine. Volume 56. Pages e222. Jul 07, 2026. Epub Jul 07, 2026.

Abstract

Executive function (EF) deficits are consistently linked to psychopathology symptoms, though the mechanisms linking poor EF to symptom expression remain unclear.
The study used the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) approach to examine relationships between teacher-reported latent psychopathology symptoms, including a general psychopathology factor (P-Factor), and EF in young children with emerging mental health problems. Participants were 804 children (70.8% male; aged 49-89 months) referred by their teachers for cognitive, emotional, or behavioral problems at school. To assess psychopathology, teachers completed the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). EF measures included inhibition, cognitive flexibility, working memory, sustained attention, and episodic memory, assessed using the NIH Toolbox, Automated Working Memory Assessment, and the Amsterdam Neuropsychological Test battery.
Structural equation modeling (incorporating confirmatory factor analysis) showed reasonable model fit and supported a P-Factor structure. Correlational analyses explored EF-psychopathology associations, followed by a sensitivity analysis controlling for sex. We observed patterns of cognitive processes that showed inverse associations between EF performance and specific clinical problems. Sustained attention was positively associated with emotional problems but negatively associated with hyperactivity problems. Sex-stratified analyses revealed distinct patterns, with inhibition problems strongly linked to conduct and hyperactivity problems, but in females only.
The findings support poor EF as a transdiagnostic risk factor associated with incremental vulnerability for childhood psychopathology. Divergent findings for sustained attentional processes suggest they can be adaptive in some contexts but maladaptive in others. Screening for EF difficulties in children could enhance early identification and inform interventions.

PMID:
42411115
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 07 Jul 2026.

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