Control
Which ICF domain does Control map to in early childhood?
In the ICF, a young child's "Control" is a cross-domain construct rather than a single code. It maps primarily to the Activities and Participation component — especially Chapter d2 (General tasks and demands, notably d250 Managing one's own behaviour) — underpinned by Body Functions Chapter b1 (Mental functions), particularly attention (b140), emotional functions (b152) and energy and drive (b130). The ICF-CY framing captures these rapidly maturing, context-sensitive self-regulation skills in early childhood, recorded alongside environmental factors.
In the ICF, a young child's emerging "control" is not one tidy box — it threads across how a child regulates emotion, directs attention and steers behaviour.
In short
In the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), the construct of Control in early childhood maps primarily to the Activities and Participation component — most directly to Chapter d2, General tasks and demands (notably d250 Managing one's own behaviour) — with strong dependencies on Body Functions Chapter b1 (Mental functions), especially b130 Energy and drive, b140 Attention and b152 Emotional functions. In short, "control" is a cross-domain functional construct, not a single ICF code: it expresses the interaction between underlying mental functions and the child's observable self-regulation in everyday tasks.The science: why Control is cross-domain in the ICF
The ICF deliberately separates capacity (what a child can do in a standardised setting) from performance (what a child does in their real environment), and "control" in early childhood — what developmental science often frames as self-regulation or emergent executive function — lives at that interface. The Activities and Participation qualifier captures the observable behaviour: a toddler managing transitions, inhibiting an impulse, or sustaining engagement (d250 Managing one's own behaviour; d160 Focusing attention). These are underpinned by Body Functions: regulation of emotion (b152), attention (b140), and energy and drive (b130). The ICF-CY (Children and Youth version, now integrated into the main ICF) was written precisely to capture these rapidly maturing, context-sensitive constructs in the under-sixes, where a single skill is not yet stable and is heavily shaped by environmental and personal contextual factors. For researchers, the practical implication is that mapping "Control" to one code under-specifies it — robust measurement links a Body Functions code to its Activities and Participation counterpart and records environmental facilitators or barriers.How this is applied in measurement
When operationalising "Control" for early childhood, the convention is to anchor the primary code in d2 General tasks and demands for the observable regulatory behaviour, then qualify with relevant b1 Mental functions codes, and finally document Environmental Factors (e) that support or hinder performance. This keeps the construct linkable across instruments and avoids conflating an internal mental function with its everyday expression.The Pinnacle way
This is general classificatory information for professionals, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore®, a clinician-administered structured assessment, and any diagnosis are formed only at a [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/) centre under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our teams map a child's regulatory and attentional profile across ICF domains and translate it into an individualised plan that may draw on behavioural therapy and allied supports.Trusted sources
WHO ICF and ICF-CY framework and browser for the structure of Body Functions and Activities and Participation components; WHO guidance on functioning classification in children and youth.Next step — If you are mapping self-regulation constructs to the ICF for research or shared clinical language, partner with our clinical-research team to align your measurement framework with validated, code-linked assessment.
What to watch
When mapping Control, watch for conflating an internal mental function (b1) with its observable everyday expression (d2) — robust ICF coding links both and documents environmental facilitators and barriers to performance.
Try this at home
When operationalising Control for under-sixes, anchor the primary code in d2 General tasks and demands for observable regulation, qualify with relevant b1 Mental functions codes, then record Environmental Factors that support or hinder performance.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is Control a single ICF code?
No. In early childhood, Control is a cross-domain construct. Its observable expression sits in Activities and Participation (Chapter d2, General tasks and demands), while its underpinnings are in Body Functions (Chapter b1, Mental functions). Mapping it to a single code under-specifies it.
Why does the ICF-CY matter for measuring Control in young children?
The ICF-CY (Children and Youth version, now integrated into the main ICF) was written to capture rapidly maturing, context-sensitive constructs such as self-regulation in the under-sixes, where skills are not yet stable and are heavily shaped by environmental and personal factors.
What is the difference between capacity and performance for Control?
Capacity is what a child can do in a standardised setting; performance is what they actually do in their real environment. Control in early childhood lives at this interface, which is why documenting environmental facilitators and barriers is essential.