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So i'm going to see how you can get the Bilingual Aphasia Test Scorer, for the Web.
Go to the McGill website, you can click on the eBAT to get the PDFs for the
Bilingual Aphasia Test, I'm just going to choose the English one
but the app will work for all of the languages as the scoring algorithm is
the same.
This is what BAT looks like in PDF form, but you can also
use it as a Google Docs Form.
To go to the Chrome web store you open a new tab in Chrome,
and then type "bilingual aphasia" you'll be able to find the app which is here.
Click on add to Chrome and it will install it.
Once it installs it looks like this. You have two steps,
First, do the spreadsheets. So to enter the data from the Bilingual Aphasia Test
as spreadsheets, and then to import to get the patient profile.
In step one you can either use Excel to enter the questions, or LibreOffice
as I have here.
Put the value of the answers in here
for all the columns.
Or you can use the Google Docs Forms which we've put together for you,
which are easier to use, but these forms are public so if you put your data here
other researchers can see it and you can share your research.
It's up to you which direction you want to go.
Clicked on
submit once you're finished,
and it will submit it to
Google Spreadsheets.
Then once you've entered all your data (it will take usually about an hour
to do)
You can go to the second step, which is to import the data.
If you used Google Spreadsheets, you have to go onto Google Spreadsheets, clicking
here, which will take you to the spreadsheet
and then choose Download as...
.csv file.
Or, if you've entered them on your computer you [go to the next step] .
So once you have your .csv, you just drag it over to the browser. You'll see a little
green plus sign indicating the browser found it.
Once it finds it will put the data here,
and we do step number
2.1
Click on the 1 button.
Now it's been imported in the proper format. We will do the same thing with the second file.
Click on button 1
to import it properly.
Now we have all the data in.
We can click on the
third button to
import it as a patient.
We can verify that worked, we can see all of the purple lines
which have been saved.
Refresh the browser and we'll have the patient's profile at the top.
We can see that the patient was pretty good at repetition,
a little weak and comprehension and phonology.
The Bilingual Aphasia Test Scorer is free and open source.
Here's the project page on GitHub, which we are using to manage the project.
It's largely made by volunteers from the University of Montreal.
and You, if you want to join us, you can. It really easy,
create a username and password on GitHub and you can help us out
and make it better!