Lmt. Byrne et al., VALIDATION OF A NEW SCORING SYSTEM FOR THE WEIGL COLOR FORM SORTING TEST IN A MEMORY DISORDERS CLINIC SAMPLE, Neuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section A, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology, 20(2), 1998, pp. 286-292
The Bristol Memory Disorders Clinic uses the Weigl Color Form Sorting
Test (CFST) to appraise abstraction and the ability to shift set. The
original scoring system for the CFST (Grewal & Haward, 1984), develope
d on the premise that sorting to form is more difficult than sorting t
o color, had no score for an individual able to sort to form and subse
quently unable to shift to color with a cue. Clinical experience sugge
sted that the performance of some individuals required such a score. A
new scoring system was developed and validated in a memory-disorders-
clinic sample. The validation showed the new score to be necessary and
gave support to the original premise that people with organic brain d
amage show a preference for sorting to color.