Shallice T, Evans M E
Cortex. 1978 Jun;14(2):294-303. doi: 10.1016/s0010-9452(78)80055-0.
Ninety-six patients with localised cerebral lesions were tested on a task of providing reasonable answers to Cognitive Estimate questions. These questions are ones that can be answered using general knowledge available to almost all subjects, but for which no immediately obvious strategy is available. It was found that patients with frontal lesions gave significantly more bizarre answers than patients with more posterior lesions. This effect is interpreted in terms of Luria's (1966) theory of the planning functions of the frontal lobes.
96名患有局部脑损伤的患者接受了一项关于对认知估计问题提供合理答案的任务测试。这些问题可以通过几乎所有受试者都具备的常识来回答,但没有直接明显的策略可用。研究发现,额叶损伤患者给出的奇怪答案比更靠后的脑区损伤患者多得多。这一效应是根据鲁利亚(1966年)关于额叶计划功能的理论来解释的。