This became known as the "three-part test" for compliance.
The generalization of this argument is known as the integral test.
Today this test is known as the Turing test and it remains an influential idea in the area of artificial intelligence.
This became known as the "subjective" test of entrapment, since it focused on the defendant's state of mind.
The Dolman method, also known as the hole-in-the-card test.
This rule, known as the 'half test', has now been abolished.
The procedure was to become known as the "Achard-Castaigne test".
This became known as the "combined test", namely a standard which requires both subjective and objective states of mind.
Another prominent test of executive dysfunction is known as the Trail-making test.
The set of conditions, known as the legal test, varies from state to state.