“…The most classical are the Trail Making Task Part B (TMT-B) where the subject has to connect letters and numbers sequentially, alternating between them; and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) where the subject has to classify cards according to an implicit and changing rule. On the TMT-B, the results seem to be inconsistent with some studies finding equal performances between OCD patients and healthy controls [13,19,20,25,34,35,51] while others do not [11,17,30,33]. With the WCST, there is far less inconsistencies, especially with regard to perseverative errors, with a pronounced trend towards poorer performance exhibited by OCD patients [8,11,[14][15][16]19,22,[34][35][36]40,44,45,51,[56][57][58][59][60][61]; even though some studies failed to report this difference [13,21,24,25,31,49,62,63] More recently, computerized tasks were developed to assess behavioral flexibility with more specificity and in a more controlled fashion.…”