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Planning
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===Neuropsychological tests=== [[File:Tower of Hanoi 4.gif|thumb|right|Animation of a four disc version of the [[Tower of Hanoi]]|alt=A version of the Tower of Hanoi utilizing four discs.]] There are a variety of neuropsychological tests which can be used to measure variance of planning ability between the subject and controls. * [[Tower of Hanoi]], a puzzle invented in 1883 by the French mathematician [[Γdouard Lucas]]. There are different variations of the puzzle: the classic version consists of three rods and usually seven to nine discs of subsequently smaller size. Planning is a key component of the problem-solving skills necessary to achieve the objective, which is to move the entire stack to another rod, obeying the following rules: ** Only one disk may be moved at a time. ** Each move consists of taking the upper disk from one of the rods and sliding it onto another rod, on top of the other disks that may already be present on that rod. ** No disk may be placed on top of a smaller disk.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Welsh | first1 = MC | last2 = Huizinga | first2 = M | date = Jun 2001 | title = The development and preliminary validation of the Tower of Hanoi-revised | url = https://pure.uva.nl/ws/files/1280702/104593_2001.welsh.huizinga.pdf| journal = Assessment | volume = 8 | issue = 2| pages = 167β76 | pmid = 11428696 | doi=10.1177/107319110100800205| s2cid = 27931772 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Anderson | first1 = JR | last2 = Albert | first2 = MV | last3 = Fincham | first3 = JM | date = Aug 2005 | title = Tracing problem solving in real time: fMRI analysis of the subject-paced Tower of Hanoi | journal = J Cogn Neurosci | volume = 17 | issue = 8| pages = 1261β74 | doi = 10.1162/0898929055002427 | pmid = 16197682 | citeseerx = 10.1.1.139.8424 | s2cid = 7567982 }}</ref> [[File:PEBLTowerOfLondon.png|thumb|Screenshot of the [[PEBL (software)|PEBL]] psychology software running the Tower of London test]] * [[Tower of London test|Tower of London]] is another test that was developed in 1992 by [[Tim Shallice]] specifically to detect deficits in planning as may occur with damage to the frontal lobe. Test participants with damage to the left anterior frontal lobe demonstrated planning deficits (i.e., greater number of moves required for solution). Test participants with damage to the right anterior, and left or right posterior areas of the frontal lobes, showed no impairment. The results implicating the left anterior frontal lobes involvement in solving the Tower of London were supported in concomitant neuroimaging studies which also showed a reduction in regional [[cerebral blood flow]] to the left pre-frontal lobe. For the number of moves, a significant negative correlation was observed for the left prefrontal area: [[i.e.]] subjects that took more time planning their moves showed greater activation in the left prefrontal area.<ref>{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1098/rstb.1982.0082 | pages = 199β209 | last = Shallice | issue = 1089 | first = T. | volume = 298 | title = Specific impairments of planning | journal = Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | year = 1982 | pmid = 6125971 | bibcode = 1982RSPTB.298..199S | doi-access = }}</ref>
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