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Executive function on the Psychology Experiment Building Language tests
Authors:Brian J. Piper  Victoria Li  Massarra A. Eiwaz  Yuliyana V. Kobel  Ted S. Benice  Alex M. Chu  Reid H. J. Olsen  Douglas Z. Rice  Hilary M. Gray  Shane T. Mueller
Affiliation:Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA. piperb@ohsu.edu
Abstract:The measurement of executive function has a long history in clinical and experimental neuropsychology. The goal of the present report was to determine the profile of behavior across the lifespan on four computerized measures of executive function contained in the recently developed Psychology Experiment Building Language (PEBL) test battery and evaluate whether this pattern is comparable to data previously obtained with the non-PEBL versions of these tests. Participants (N = 1,223; ages, 5–89 years) completed the PEBL Trail Making Test (pTMT), the Wisconsin Card Sort Test (pWCST; Berg, Journal of General Psychology, 39, 15–22, 1948; Grant & Berg, Journal of Experimental Psychology, 38, 404–411, 1948), the Tower of London (pToL), or a time estimation task (Time-Wall). Age-related effects were found over all four tests, especially as age increased from young childhood through adulthood. For several tests and measures (including pToL and pTMT), age-related slowing was found as age increased in adulthood. Together, these findings indicate that the PEBL tests provide valid and versatile new research tools for measuring executive functions.
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