A computer program for testing and analyzing random generation behavior in normal and clinical samples: The Mittenecker pointing test

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Abstract

Random sequence generation tests have proved to be a useful diagnostic tool for the identification of clinically relevant impairments of executive functions and for the study of cognitive functioning in healthy individuals. The most prevalent variety, random number generation, involves several limitations, however. In the original Mittenecker Pointing Test (MPT; Mittenecker, 1958), subjects were instructed to point successively and as randomly as possible at nine unlabeled circles irregularly arranged on a cardboard. With the computer program presented here, Mittenecker's classical test has been transferred to a contemporary format. The MPT can be applied using a standard PC keyboard and computes a series of sophisticated measures of deviations from randomness on the basis of information theory analysis. Because of its easy and well-controlled administration and reduced demands on memory and attention, the automatized MPT offers a wide range of application possibilities in normal but also in severely impaired clinical samples. © 2010 The Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Schulter, G., Mittenecker, E., & Papousek, I. (2010). A computer program for testing and analyzing random generation behavior in normal and clinical samples: The Mittenecker pointing test. Behavior Research Methods, 42(1), 333–341. https://doi.org/10.3758/BRM.42.1.333

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