Brief ReportAn analysis of the significance of performance errors on the trail making test in polysubstance users
References (11)
- et al.
A comparison of the Trail Making Test, Symbol Digit Modalities Test, and the Hooper Visualization Test in an inpatient substance abuse population
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
(1988) - et al.
Test-retest of the Halstead Impairment Index in hospitalized alcoholic and nonalcoholic males with mild to moderate neuropsychological impairment
Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology
(1981) - et al.
Changes in neuropsychological performance during treatment for alcoholism
Biological Psychiatry
(1979) - et al.
Neuropsychological deficits in alcoholic men in their mid thirties
American Journal of Psychiatry
(1980) The Hooper Visual Organization Test Manual
(1983)
There are more references available in the full text version of this article.
Cited by (11)
Neuropsychological effects of stress on social phobia with and without comorbid depression
2007, Behaviour Research and TherapyCitation Excerpt :These results suggest that under stress comorbid subjects completed the task with a more rapid but inaccurate performance. While their difficulty under stress is not readily apparent by examining the time to completion alone, this is consistent with several studies showing that the error analysis of TMT B is a more useful method of categorizing performance in various populations (Kinney, Yurgelun-Todd, Waternaux, & Matthysse, 1994; McCaffrey, Krahula, & Heimberg, 1989; Stuss et al., 2001). The comorbid subjects’ impaired performance on this task may be related to difficulties in bringing multiple processing resources online.
Color Trails Test: A New Set of Data on Cognitive Flexibility and Processing Speed in Schizophrenia
2020, Frontiers in PsychiatryTrail Making Test: Normative data for the Latin American Spanish speaking adult population
2015, NeuroRehabilitationTrail Making Test error analysis in classic motor neuron disease
2013, Neurological SciencesTrail making test errors and executive function in schizophrenia and depression
2006, Clinical Neuropsychologist
Copyright © 1989 Published by Elsevier Ltd.