“…Indeed, the WPT or the Ice Cream Task, a modified version of the WPT in which participants must predict the flavor of ice cream preferred by a cartoon figure based on the different accessories worn by that figure ( Shohamy et al, 2004a ), have been extensively used in clinical populations to evaluate the behavioral consequences of known or presumed structural or functional basal ganglia deficiencies: for example in schizophrenia ( Keri et al, 2000 ; Weickert et al, 2002 ; Foerde et al, 2008 ; Horan et al, 2008 ; Gomar et al, 2011 ; Karcher et al, 2019 ; Fernandez et al, 2021 ), Tourette syndrome ( Keri et al, 2002 ; Marsh et al, 2004 ), bulimia nervosa ( Labouliere et al, 2016 ), attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder ( Gabay and Goldfarb, 2017 ), Parkinson and Huntington diseases ( Knowlton et al, 1996a , b ; Shohamy et al, 2004a , b ), and children with acquired or developmental basal ganglia pathology ( Mayor-Dubois et al, 2010 ). Researchers have also used these tasks to assess memory capacities in individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders thought to be characterized by some procedural memory deficits, such as autism ( Brown et al, 2010 ; Obeid et al, 2016 ), obsessive–compulsive disorder ( Exner et al, 2014 ; Kelmendi et al, 2016 ; Hansmeier et al, 2018 ), specific language impairment ( Kemeny and Lukacs, 2010 ; Mayor-Dubois et al, 2014 ; Obeid et al, 2016 ), or developmental dyslexia ( Gabay et al, 2015 ). However, to properly interpret the results of investigations employing these tasks, it is critical to precisely define the cognitive processes actually engaged during their resolution, and not rely simply on the fact that overall task performance may be more or less impaired in individuals with certain pathologies.…”