33 Inventing the Stuart Tactile Maps test - Ian
RO&Ming with Lil
English - March 17, 2021 07:00 - 44 minutes - 30.9 MBHow To Education Self-Improvement orientation and mobility functional assessment low vision blind long cane tele-practice person-centred practice guide dogs assistive technology Homepage Download Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Orientation is the vital O in O&M and we might assume that everyone can learn orientation, but this is not the case. How can we assess a person’s ability to learn orientation to new places? The Stuart Tactile Maps test is a table top test of spatial cognition that only takes 10 minutes to administer. Everyone does the test wearing a blindfold whether or not they have vision and the test predicts a person’s ability to use mental mapping for orientation. So where did this test come from? In this episode, I’m talking with Dr Ian Stuart about starting out as a neuropsychologist in Melbourne in the 1970s. He developed the Stuart Tactile Maps test as part of his PhD study in the 1980s, working with congenitally blind children and adults with acquired brain injury. Ian has worked with me to make the Stuart Tactile Maps test commercially available for use by O&M specialists. The instruction manual includes plenty of ideas for working with someone who has trouble with mental mapping.