# Age-related differences in the association between executive function and social responsiveness in autism spectrum disorder: a multi-method study

**Authors:** Jiarou Chen, Kaiyue Han, Xingxing Liao, Junzi Long, Xianna Wang, Yan Zhang, Weiwei Luo, Zhiqing Tang, Hao Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1729973 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-03-12

## TL;DR

This study explores how executive function relates to social skills in autism across different ages, finding that these connections change as people grow older.

## Contribution

The study reveals age-specific pathways of EF mediation in social responsiveness and identifies distinct subtypes of EF-social functioning profiles in ASD.

## Key findings

- ASD individuals showed significant EF and social responsiveness impairments compared to controls across age groups.
- EF broadly mediated social responsiveness in adults but showed more selective mediation in children.
- Latent profile analysis identified four distinct subtypes of EF-social functioning profiles independent of age, sex, and IQ.

## Abstract

Executive function (EF) deficits are a core cognitive feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and are closely associated with social responsiveness. Previous research has primarily focused on children with ASD, whereas how specific executive components relate to social functioning in adults remains less clear. This study examined whether patterns of association between EF and social responsiveness differ between children and adults with and without ASD.

Data were obtained from the Autism Brain Imaging Data Exchange II (ABIDE II), including 423 participants aged 8–23 years (ASD = 184; controls = 239). EF was evaluated using the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF/BRIEF-A), and social responsiveness was assessed with the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS). Covariates of age, sex, and full-scale IQ (FIQ) were controlled using entropy balancing in children and multiple regression in adults. Hierarchical regression, moderated mediation analysis, and latent profile analysis (LPA) were conducted to examine the moderation, mediation, and heterogeneity effects, respectively.

Across both child and adult samples, individuals with ASD exhibited significantly higher T-scores than controls on nearly all BRIEF and SRS subdomains after covariate adjustment (all adjusted p < 0.01), indicating widespread EF and social responsiveness impairments. Moderation analyses revealed no significant age group × EF interaction, indicating that the association between EF and social responsiveness was consistent across development. Mediation analysis revealed age-specific pathways, with EF broadly mediating social responsiveness in adults but showing more selective mediation in children. LPA identified four distinct subtypes, which were independent of age, sex, and FIQ.

EF–social responsiveness associations were evident across development, but the functional contribution of specific executive components became more differentiated with age. Working memory showed greater relative prominence in adulthood. Latent profile analysis revealed heterogeneity in how executive difficulties align with social challenges, supporting developmentally informed assessment and clinical interpretation rather than direct treatment recommendations.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** autism spectrum disorder (MONDO:0005258)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Executive function (EF) deficits (MESH:D001289), social responsiveness impairments (OMIM:300082), ASD (MESH:D000067877)

## Full text

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13017910/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13017910