
Done is 1/0 indicating that the problem was completed.clicktime indicates the time since the previous move.
#THE TOWER OF LONDON TRIAL#
Trialtime indicates the time from the start of the trial. abstime is the absolute timer recording when the move was recorded. score is a running total score, which is just one point per number of disks in correctly solved problems. tries indicates which reset round (if multiple tries is allowed). reset is whether resetting was used in the trial. size is the number of disks in the problem. trial indicates which trial in the test. There are two output files, named according to the subject number: If you don't want the hand shown, change the following from 1 to 0: pile heights, 3 disks, 30 problems, time and move limit) Fimbel et al (2009) young: pile heights, 3 disks, progressive difficulty, 35 trials). Fimbel et al (2009) old: pile heights, 3 disks, progressive difficulty, 15 trials). Phillips (1999) trials C (unconstrained piles, 5 disks, progressive difficulty, 8 trials). Phillips (1999) trials B (unconstrained piles, 5 disks, progressive difficulty, 8 trials). Phillips (1999) trials A (unconstrained piles, 5 disks, progressive difficulty, 8 trials). Shallice pile heights, 3 disks, 30 random trials. Shallice test ( pile heights, 3 disks, Shallice's 12 problems. Unconstrained pile heights, disks, Random presentation, 30 trials. The default problem sets use different problems, different pole heights, and different numbers of disks, and include: An experimenter can select one of them by default by editing the PEBL script, or use the built-in facilities to develop an individual random set.
PEBL's Tower of London has nine different options that can be selected at startup. It is related to the classic problem-solving puzzle known as the Tower of Hanoi. The test was introduced by Tim Shallice in 1982 in a study looking at impairments from injury in different brain regions. From wikipedia, The Tower of London test is a well known test used in applied clinical neuropsychology for the assessment of executive functioning.