The Pyramids and Palm Trees test assesses semantic access from words and pictures, and determines the degree to which a subject can access meaning from pictures and words. Guidance on using this test in your telepractice
Pyramids and Palm Trees Test
Activate to view the image in zoom mode

Pyramids and Palm Trees Test

Pyramids and Palm Trees

David Howard,Karalyn Patterson
The Pyramids and Palm Trees test assesses semantic access from words and pictures, and determines the degree to which a subject can access meaning from pictures and words. Guidance on using this test in your telepractice
Choose from our formats
Publication date:
1992
Age range:
18 years to 80 years
Qualification level:
B

The pattern of results from this simple forced-choice format test can be used to build up a picture of the subject’s ability to access semantic and conceptual information.

Benefits

  • Indicates whether a subject has a central, modality-independent impairment to semantic knowledge.
  • Gives information whether there are modality-specific difficulties in access to semantics.
  • Establish the cause of a subject’s difficulty in naming or pointing to a named picture.
  • May help in the design of appropriate rehabilitation programs.

Features

Six different versions of the test are possible by using either pictures, or written or spoken words to change the modality of stimulus or response items. The test is ideal for theoretically motivated testing of picture and word comprehension in subjects with:

  • Aphasia
  • Global aphasia
  • Visual agnosia
  • General semantic impairment (i.e., Alzheimer’s disease)