Benton Visual Retention Test


Benton Visual Retention Test

A format of psychometric testing in which a person age 8 to adult is shown 10 cards, each consisting of one or more simple geometric designs. The test subject looks at a card for 10 seconds, then draws what he or she saw immediately after its removal. The test requires spatial conception, immediate recall and visuomotor reproduction, and is used to detect brain injury and learning disabilities.

Benton Visual Form Discrimination Test

, The Benton, Benton visual retention test (bent′ŏn) [Arthur Lester Benton, U.S. neuropsychologist, 1909–2006] A test to gauge visual perception and the ability to recall objects that have been seen. The subject looks at ten different images, which he or she then tries to draw faithfully from memory. The degree to which the drawings made conform to and deviate from the original images is scored. The Benton is used to measure brain damage, learning disability (primarily in children), and degenerative brain diseases like dementia (in which adults demonstrate a progressively worsening inability to learn or recall new information).

Benton,

Arthur Lester, U.S. psychologist, 1909–. Benton Visual Retention Test - test of ability to reproduce geometric designs from memory.