OBJECTIVE: Executive function assessment is central in clinical practice and research, and the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-Adult Version (BRIEF-A) is widely used in adults. However, its nine-factor structure has rarely been evaluated with contemporary factor-analytic standards, prompting this study to examine its factorial validity and propose a psychometrically robust alternative. METHOD: = 1599). Factorial validity was examined using confirmatory and exploratory factor analyses, conducted on manifest items. A split-sample cross-validation procedure was applied to item-level analyses to identify a reduced item configuration reflecting the latent structure. RESULTS: None of the traditional BRIEF-A factor structures reported in the literature demonstrated acceptable model fit, whether analyses were based on individual items or parceled scores. In contrast, a six-factor, 24-item solution emerged, showing strong model fit, accounting for approximately 50% of the variance, and replicating across samples. CONCLUSION: The 24-item configuration provides a parsimonious representation of response patterns associated with adult executive functioning compared with the original 70-item organization. These findings concern the latent structure of BRIEF-A responses and do not constitute an alternative instrument. Future studies should examine the factorial structure of the BRIEF-A in clinical populations to further assess the robustness and generalizability of these findings.
Bayard et al. (Sun,) studied this question.