Wisconsin Card Sorting Test® (WCST)

9999 in stock

Wisconsin Card Sorting Test® (WCST) David A. Grant, PhD, Esta A. Berg, PhD




  • Purpose: Assess perseveration and abstract reasoning


  • Age Range: Child, Adolescent, Adult, Elder Adult


  • Adminitration: Individual


  • Time: 20-30 minutes

Although the WCST is used primarily to assess perseveration and abstract thinking, it has gained increasing popularity as a neuropsychological instrument. It has been considered a measure of executive function because of its reported sensitivity to frontal lobe dysfunction. As such, the WCST allows the clinician to assess the following \”frontal\” lobe functions: strategic planning, organized searching, utilizing environmental feedback to shift cognitive sets, directing behavior toward achieving a goal, and modulating impulsive responding.




  • Designed for individuals ages 6.5-89 years.



  • Has shown specific sensitivity to brain lesions involving frontal lobes.



  • Can be considered a measure of executive function, requiring the ability to develop and maintain an appropriate problem-solving strategy across changing stimulus conditions in order to achieve a future goal.



  • Provides objective scores not only of overall success, but also for specific sources of difficulty on the task (e.g., inefficient initial conceptualization, perseveration, failure to maintain a cognitive set, and inefficient learning across stages of the test).



  • The four stimulus cards incorporate three stimulus parameters.



  • The stimulus cards and response cards use the systematic figure configurations originally developed and introduced in 1948 by David A. Grant, PhD, and Esta A. Berg, PhD.



  • Raw score to normalized standard, percentile, and T score conversion.



  • Normative data derived from 899 normal children, adolescents, and adults.



  • Case illustrations aid in scoring and interpretation.

Administration/Scoring




  • The response cards are numbered from 1 to 64 on the lower left corner of the reverse side to ensure a standard order of presentation.



  • Respondents are required to sort the cards according to different principles during the test administration.

Appropriate Populations




  • Clients should have normal or corrected vision and hearing sufficient to adequately comprehend the test instructions and to visually discriminate the stimulus parameters of Color, Form, and Number.



  • Among clinical populations with known or suspected brain dysfunction, these requirements may not be fully met. In such cases, the reliability and validity of the WCST data will depend on the clinical skill and expertise of the examiner.

Special Features




  • Unlike other measures of abstraction, the WCST provides objective measures of overall success and identifies particular sources of difficulty on the task.



  • When used with more comprehensive ability testing, the WCST is helpful in discriminating frontal from nonfrontal lesions.

WCST Introductory Kit includes WCST Revised and Expanded Manual, 2 Decks of Cards, and 50 Record Booklets.