This study first examined the respective relations of resiliency and
reactive control with executive functioning. It then examined the
relationship of these different domains to the development of academic and
social outcomes, and to the emergence of internalizing and externalizing
problem behavior in adolescence. Resiliency and reactive control were
assessed from preschool to adolescence in a high-risk sample of boys and
girls (n = 498) and then linked to component operations of
neuropsychological executive functioning (i.e., response inhibition,
interference control, fluency, working memory/set-shifting, planning,
and alertness), assessed in early and late adolescence. Consistent, linear
relations were found between resiliency and executive functions (average
r = .17). A curvilinear relationship was observed between
reactive control and resiliency, such that resiliency was weaker when
reactive control was either very high or very low. In multivariate,
multilevel models, executive functions contributed to academic competence,
whereas resiliency and interference control jointly predicted social
competence. Low resiliency, low reactive control, and poor response
inhibition uniquely and additively predicted internalizing problem
behavior, whereas low reactive control and poor response inhibition
uniquely predicted externalizing problem behavior. Results are discussed
in relation to recent trait models of regulation and the scaffolded
development of competence and problems in childhood and adolescence.This work was supported by NIAAA Grant
R01-AA12217 to Robert Zucker and Joel Nigg, NIAAA Grant R37-AA07065 to
Robert Zucker and Hiram Fitzgerald, and NIMH Grant R01-MH59105 to Joel
Nigg. We are indebted to the families and staff who made the study
possible.