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  1. The Tower of London test is a test used in applied clinical neuropsychology for the assessment of executive functioning specifically to detect deficits in planning, which may occur due to a variety of medical and neuropsychiatric conditions.

  2. Jan 1, 1995 · In the Tower of London (ToL) test, participants arrange colored discs on pegs to match a given pattern, testing executive functions and visuospatial planning skills.

  3. Tower of London Test. The Tower of London Test is a cognitive assessment tool that measures executive planning proficiency, including the ability to outline, organize, and integrate behaviors in order to achieve a goal. It is particularly sensitive to frontal lobe dysfunction caused by both unilateral and bilateral disease.

  4. The Tower Test assesses several key EFs, including planning. The objective is to move disks, varying in size from small to large, across three pegs to build a designated tower in the fewest number of moves possible.

  5. The D-KEFS Tower Test is a version of the TOH and it contains five disks ranging in size from small to large and a board with three vertical pegs. The test measures spatial planning, rule learning, inhibition of impulsive responding, and establishing and maintaining set.

  6. Jan 17, 2017 · Tower of London (ToL) is an executive function task utilized primarily to assess planning ability and was originally developed by Shallice (1982) as a modification of the Tower of Hanoi (Nitschke, Kostering, Finkel, Weiller, & Kaller, 2016; Shallice & Burgess, 1991; Unterrainer & Owen, 2006).

  7. Aug 1, 2004 · The Tower of London (TOL) is one task used in the assessment of executive function. For adults with ADHD, there is minimal research on the extent to which they demonstrate impaired performance on tower tasks.

  8. fig 1. Example of the Tower of London screen. A, Sample screen of one of the configurations of a planning problem. Upper, baseline configuration; lower, target configuration. In this example, the participant has been asked to move first the blue ball to the right rod, which is counterintuitive.

  9. The Tower of London (TOL) task has been used extensively as a test of planning ability in neuropsychological patients and normal populations. Participants are asked to preplan mentally a sequence of moves to match a start set of discs to a goal, and then to execute the moves one by one.

  10. Sep 1, 2000 · A well-known test to evaluate planning in neuropsychological research is the Tower of London test . For this test, the participant is instructed to move three different colored balls to match a target configuration by using a minimum number of moves.

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