Raizner Randi D
Department of Psychology, University of Houston, USA.
Dev Neuropsychol. 2002;21(1):1-14. doi: 10.1207/S15326942DN2101_1.
The Tower of London (TOL) is a neuropsychological test used to assess problem-solving and planning skills. Clinically, the measure has demonstrated sensitivity in discriminating between performance among individuals with varying severity of closed head injury (CHI). However, ceiling effects have been demonstrated with preadolescent and adolescent CHI samples. An extended version of the Tower of London (TOL-E) was devised to minimize these ceiling effects. In this study we examined the performance of 26 normal children between the ages of 7 and 16 years on the TOL-E. Significant complexity and age effects suggest that the TOL-E contributes a significant level of complexity relative to the original TOL across all age groups. This finding has implications for the measure's ability to detect the development of planning and problem solving in normal children as well as to differentiate between impaired and nonimpaired samples.
伦敦塔测试(TOL)是一种用于评估解决问题和规划能力的神经心理学测试。在临床上,该测试已显示出在区分不同严重程度闭合性颅脑损伤(CHI)个体的表现方面具有敏感性。然而,在青春期前和青春期CHI样本中已证实存在天花板效应。为了尽量减少这些天花板效应,设计了伦敦塔测试扩展版(TOL-E)。在本研究中,我们考察了26名7至16岁正常儿童在TOL-E上的表现。显著的复杂性和年龄效应表明,相对于原始的TOL,TOL-E在所有年龄组中都增加了显著的复杂性水平。这一发现对于该测试检测正常儿童规划和解决问题能力发展以及区分受损和未受损样本的能力具有重要意义。