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Planning and Problem Solving Skills Following Focal Frontal Brain Lesions in Childhood: Analysis Using the Tower of London
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2002
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain FunctionDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceEducationCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyFocal LesionsCognitive DevelopmentExecutive FunctionCognitive NeuroscienceBehavioural ProblemChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceNeuropsychological FunctioningSocial SkillsBrain StructureFocal Frontal PathologyCognitive VariableChild DevelopmentProcedural MemoryLondon TestNeuroscience
Problem solving skills were investigated in children with focal lesions using the Tower of London test (TOL; Shallice, 1982). The scoring procedure was elaborated from previous studies to delineate separate processes contributing to overall performance in children. Thirty-one children with focal frontal pathology, 18 children with focal pathology in other brain regions (extra-frontal), 17 children with generalized pathology and 38 healthy children participated in the study. Results suggest a distributed network for problem solving skills, particularly cognitive flexibility and goal setting skills. Within the frontal group, children with lesions involving the right pre-frontal cortex had greatest problems with self-regulation, with rule breaks most common among this group. As these skills develop relatively early in comparison to other aspects of executive function, right pre-frontal regions may play a particularly important role in the development of executive skills in childhood, with damage to these regions rendering children vulnerable to a range of cognitive and social deficits.