We appreciate the comments on our article by Drs. Savage and Rauch proposing that our null results might be explained by the fact that cognitive abilities dependent on prefrontal function do not develop until later in childhood and, thus, were not apparent at the time of our evaluation of children with OCD. They suggest an emerging deficit in frontal lobe function that mirrors the clinical phenomenology of the illness, noting that the obsessions may not fully develop until frontal lobe processes reach full maturity, sometime after age 12. This is a worthy hypothesis. In a study by Levin and colleagues (1991), healthy older children (ages 13–15 years) showed the expected developmental gains on a measure of verbal fluency and on the Tower of London task (a.k.a. Tower of Hanoi). However, on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and the Go–No-Go task, both of which were also included in our study, children performed at the adult level by age 12. Noting that our group was strikingly similar in age to that of the group of Levin et al. (12.3 years [SD=2.9] versus 11.1 years [SD=1.1], respectively), we do not feel that developmental level itself can explain our null results, especially with respect to the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test.