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1 ing Speed Index), and executive functioning (Trail Making Test).
2  the Purdue Pegboard task, and part B of the Trail Making Test).
3 nd cognitive flexibility, assessed using the Trail Making Test.
4 Intelligence Scale, and Part B of the Reitan Trail Making Test.
5 te Examination and a modified version of the Trail-Making Test.
6 th Complex Figure, Grooved Pegboard, and the Trail Making tests.
7 = 9 x 10(-5)); and Trail Making Test B minus Trail Making Test A (P = .002; Pc = .02).
8  battery of 6 tests-Five Words Test (WORDS), Trail Making Test A and B (TMT A and B), Digit Span and
9 ith a reaction time test "snap game" and the Trail Making Test A and B were used as a measure of cogn
10 ith a marginal/fail score performed worse on Trail Making Tests A (P = .03) and B (P = .05), right-si
11 est such as Mini-Mental State Examination or Trail Making Tests A and B (23 studies), and comprehensi
12 cognition, Digit Spans Forward and Backward, Trail Making Tests A and B, and a global composite.
13 ubscale of the Mattis Dementia Rating Scale, Trail Making tests A and B, and D Trails (Trails B time
14                                  Declines in Trail-Making Tests A and B and Word List delayed recogni
15 ), Stroop Color-Naming, Stroop Word-Reading, Trail-Making Test-A (TMT-A), Color Trails-1 (CTT1)], and
16 indexed by processing speed on part B of the trail-making test.All six participants were safely impla
17 ination, Control Oral Word Association Test, Trail Making Test and Digit Span tests; whereas health-r
18 ised [delayed recall]) and processing speed (Trail Making Test and Digit Symbol Coding).
19 ned as a score in the highest decile for the Trail Making Test and in the lowest decile for all other
20 nt in tests of information processing speed (Trail Making Test) and executive function (Color Trails
21 utive function (set shifting measured by the Trail Making Test) and response inhibition control (meas
22 tests (Hopkins Verbal Learning Test-Revised, Trail Making Test, and Controlled Oral Word Association)
23 h Edition Coding and Symbol Search subtests, Trail Making Test, and NIH Toolbox Cognitive Battery Pat
24  and 130 s [86-175] in placebo group) of the Trail Making Test, and the Barthel index (90 [IQR 60-100
25 time needed to complete parts A and B of the Trail Making Test, and the Barthel index.
26  frontal lobe and executive functioning, the Trail Making Test, and the Verbal Fluency Test.
27 s were associated with poorer performance on Trail Making Test B (r = .46, p = .01).
28  Test (P = 1 x 10(-5); Pc = 9 x 10(-5)); and Trail Making Test B minus Trail Making Test A (P = .002;
29                                              Trail Making Test B was successfully administered virtua
30 ual Retention Test); information processing (Trail Making Test B) and literacy (National Adult Readin
31 and performance on subtests of Digit Symbol, Trail Making Test B, and Block Design, controlling for a
32 ge declines in Benton Visual Retention Test, Trail Making Test B, and Mini-Mental State Examination s
33  fluency test, Benton Visual Retention Test, Trail Making Test B, and Mini-Mental State Examination u
34 ated with Mini-Mental State Examination, the Trail Making Test B, memory, hippocampal volume, Braak s
35  score range, 0 to -26), executive function (Trail-Making Test B minus A; range, -290 to 290), and sp
36 nemic and semantic verbal fluency tests, and Trail-Making Test B version.
37 d by using the Mini-Mental State Examination Trail-Making Test B, and category fluency test.
38 Stimulus-Continuous Performance Test and the Trail-Making Test B-Adolescent Version, the parents of C
39 EF), estimated as the difference between the trail-making tests B and A.
40                                              Trail Making Test (B-A), a measure of cognitive flexibil
41  significant predictor at p < 0.001) and the Trail-Making Test (B), F(3,157) = 3.70, R(2) = 0.07, p <
42 st (SMD, 0.34; 95% CI, 0.13-0.56; P = .002), Trail Making Test-B (SMD, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.13-0.80; P = .
43 e left MFG was inversely correlated with the Trail Making Test-B scores; the rsFC of the left IPL was
44 , i.e. they performed worse than controls in Trail-Making-Test-B (TMT-B; P = 0.01).
45 ive (ADAS-Cog), Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS), Trail Making Test, Category Fluency, Mini-Mental State E
46        Assessments of cognitive performance (Trail Making Test, Digit Symbol, Verbal Fluency, Digit S
47 ed and working memory, semantic fluency, and trail making tests] domains.
48  x time interaction on the processing speed (trail making test: F = 8.14, P = 0.01) and a trend in pr
49 nts also underwent assessment with the Color Trail Making Test, FAS verbal fluency, Digit Span, Hoope
50     Executive function was assessed with the trail-making test, fluid intelligence with puzzle tasks,
51 ons and LD on 2 neuropsychological measures (Trail-Making Test, Form B [P=.007] and Symbol Digit Moda
52 rkers of executive dysfunction (Stroop Test, Trail Making Test) in prodromal Huntington's disease, wh
53                                          The Trail Making Test is an accessible neuropsychological in
54  function (Letter-Number Sequencing Test and Trail Making Test), language processing (semantic and ph
55 , and verbal fluency were assessed using the Trail Making Test part A (TMT-A) and part B (TMT-B) and
56 est [mean score, 41.2 versus 43.4; P=0.005], Trail Making Test Part A [mean seconds, 45.1 versus 42.2
57 using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, the Trail Making Test part A, and the Trail Making Test part
58                                      For the Trail Making Test Part A, scores in the diet-exercise gr
59 aired on a smaller but similar set of tests (Trail Making Test part A, Stroop test, Performance IQ, g
60 ts with CT+ mTBI) and performed worse on the Trail Making Test Part B (B = 30.1 [95% CI, 11.9-48.2] i
61 14.16 for AC- participants; P = .04) and the Trail Making Test Part B (raw mean scores: 97.85 seconds
62 h subject Mini Mental Status Exam (MMSE) and Trail Making Test part b (TMT-b) scores.
63      We assessed executive function with the Trail Making Test Part B and the Digit Symbol Substituti
64 tive function (3MS), and executive function (Trail Making Test Part B minus Part A) in 894 recipients
65 sment, the Trail Making Test part A, and the Trail Making Test part B to assess global cognition, att
66 Performance Test-II) and executive function (Trail Making Test Part B, Controlled Oral Word Associati
67 g Test -0.7; SE 0.3) and executive function (Trail Making Test Part B, Digit Span backwards, and Digi
68 tion, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, the Trail Making Test Part B, the Mini-Cog test, and the Dig
69 001); a similar finding was observed for the Trail Making Test Part B.
70 logic Status and executive function with the Trail Making Test Part B.
71   However, except for executive dysfunction (Trail Making Test Part B; relative mean difference, 1.15
72 e Modified Mini-Mental State (3MS) Test, and Trail-Making Test Part B at baseline and 7 years later.
73  included the Kendrick Object Learning Test, Trail Making Test (part A), modified versions of the Dig
74 ory Verbal Learning Test 30-minute delay and Trail Making Test, part A (P < .001 for each) scores com
75  aMCI and AD group was associated with worse Trail Making Test, part A scores and smaller hippocampal
76 opsychological battery (category fluency and Trail Making Test, part A, time test) correctly classifi
77 = 3.26, 95% confidence interval: 1.54, 6.88; Trail Making Test, part A: odds ratio = 3.03, 95% confid
78  Slow visual scanning and psychomotor speed (Trail Making Test, Part A: OR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.01-1.03),
79 s indicating worse global cognition) and the Trail Making Test, Part B (population age-, sex-, and ed
80 e on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and the Trail Making Test, part B (Trails B), as well as other m
81  the Functional Assessment Questionnaire and Trail Making Test, part B, accounted for approximately 5
82 ation between the anterior cingulate and the Trail Making Test, Part B, in the healthy control subjec
83 gical Status and executive function with the Trail Making Test, Part B.
84 orimotor striatum negatively correlated with Trail-Making Test, Part B, time spent in healthy control
85 ted with a measure of cognitive control, the Trail-Making Test, Part B.
86 enuated by Mini-Mental State Examination and Trail Making Test Parts A and B and was rendered statist
87 cal tests (Immediate Recall, Delayed Recall, Trail Making Test Parts A and B, and Category Fluency) i
88   Other outcomes included Word Fluency Test, Trail Making Test Parts A and B, and Geriatric Depressio
89 -Plus), which included the 13-item ADAS-Cog, Trail Making Test Parts A and B, Digit Span Forward and
90                In the longitudinal analysis, Trail Making Test parts A and B, Stroop test and Perform
91               We analyzed performance on the Trail Making Test parts A and B, the Letter Digit Substi
92 ion on the Mini-Mental State Examination and Trail Making Test Parts A and B.
93 CVLT delayed recall), Wechsler Digit Symbol, Trail-making Test parts A and B (TMT-A; TMT-B), and a gl
94 g the Digit Symbol Substitution Test and the Trail Making Test (Parts A and B); symptom questionnaire
95 iffusivity of the tract were associated with Trail Making Test performance in T/T men.
96                           Verbal fluency and Trail Making Test performance, but not mood, were signif
97 2), and cognitive function measured with the Trail Making Test (reported elsewhere).
98 ed neuropsychological tests, we included the Trail Making Test, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, Di
99                    Among participants with a Trail Making Test scaled score of 7 or higher, the odds
100                    Among participants with a Trail Making Test scaled score of less than 7, aripipraz
101 sments of the domains of Executive Function (Trail Making Test, Stroop, Digit Span), Processing Speed
102                      EF was comprised of the Trail Making Test, the STROOP Test, and Matrix Reasoning
103 he Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Trail Making Test (TMT) A and B, and the Verbal Fluency
104                                          The Trail Making Test (TMT) is a complex task involving visu
105                                          The Trail Making Test (TMT) is a widely used test of executi
106                                          The Trail Making Test (TMT) is one of the most popular neuro
107 kward, and Logical Memory 1 and 2 subscales; Trail Making Test (TMT) parts A and B; Digit Symbol Subs
108 d learning and memory were examined with the Trail Making Test (TMT), Rey Auditory Learning Test and
109 p Word-Color Interference Test (Stroop), and Trail Making Test (TMT).
110 ng the IGT, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, and Trail Making Test (TMT).
111 h the digit-symbol substitution test (DSST), Trail Making Tests (TMT), and verbal fluency tests at th
112 ential change with stimulation on the Reitan Trail-Making test (TMT B) (STN more improved) and on som
113 processing speed (Digit-Symbol Substitution, Trails Making Test-Trail A).
114 cy-phonemic fluency), executive functioning (Trails Making Test-Trail B), and processing speed (Digit
115 tcome Scale-Extended [GOSE-TBI]), cognition (Trail Making Test [Trails] parts A and B), Disability Ra

 
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