“…For example, he estimated the height of the highest building in London as between 18,000 and 20,000 feet and that the largest fish in the world was a trout which was over 3 metres long. Estimation difficulties are not solely limited to individuals with such discrete frontal lobe injury, and problems in estimation abilities have been reported in adults with Alzheimer's disease [ 6 – 9 ], viral encephalitis [ 10 ], frontotemporal dementia [ 9 , 11 ], Huntington's disease [ 12 ], Korsakoff's syndrome [ 13 , 14 ], Parkinson's disease [ 15 – 17 ] (however, see Scarpina et al [ 18 ] for a recent finding of no difference between PD patients and controls), vascular dementia [ 19 , 20 ], traumatic brain injury [ 21 – 23 ], major depressive disorder [ 24 ], and schizophrenia [ 25 – 27 ]. This breadth of effect across a broad number of conditions would suggest that investigation of estimation abilities in terms of measurement and possible effects on outcome is worthy of investigation.…”