Social Skills Intervention Participation and Associated Improvements in Executive Function Performance
Table 2
Association of SCI-A curricular units and executive functions.
SCI-A unit
Curricular content
Executive function
(1) Recognizing facial expressions
Visual recognition of key facial features Displaying facial expressions Strategies for scanning facial features to read emotions
(2) Sharing ideas
Speaker skills: gaining attention, staying on topic, sharing the main idea, appropriate eye contact/body proximity/volume Listener skills: appropriate eye contact/body proximity
Working Memory: staying on topic Inhibitory Control: sharing only the main idea/not sharing irrelevant information; avoiding interrupting others
(3) Turn taking in conversation
Conversational reciprocity Using questions and comments Transitioning in/out of conversations
Inhibitory Control: avoid interrupting others Working Memory: staying on topic, building off another person’s comments Cognitive Flexibility: switching/transitioning topics
(4) Feelings and emotions
Understand emotional range/variance/intensity Self-control and emotion regulation Using context to understand others’ emotions/perspective taking
(5) Problem solving
Identify components of problems (who, what) Generate and evaluate possible solutions Collaborate with others to solve problems
Inhibitory Control: use appropriate conversational skills to collaborate Working Memory: holding the ideas of others to collaborative problem solving Cognitive Flexibility: generate alternate solutions
Consistent with EF being only one of several interrelated constructs that contribute to social competence, the content in any given unit involves a combination of EF and other processes (e.g., social reciprocity, and pragmatic language).