Therese Händel Waggestad, Bjørn-Eivind Kirsebom, Carsten Strobel, Linda Gjøra, Geir Selbæk, Peter Bekkhus-Wetterberg, Olav Aga, Jens Egeland
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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:为老年人修订后的TMT-NR3字母支持轨迹测验(Trail Making Test with alphabet support, TMT-NR3)提供回归规范。通过研究年龄、教育和性别的潜在调节效应和假定的相互作用效应,我们旨在深入了解认知衰老和教育的影响。方法:共纳入440名来自NorFAST (n = 249)和HUNT (n = 191)研究的70至92岁的健康参与者。生成了基于回归的TMT-A、TMT-B和衍生测量TMT B-A、TMT B/A和TMT-β的规范。对模型进行相关的线性、曲线或年龄、教育程度和性别的相互作用的评估。我们评估并比较了我们的规范与公布的北美TMT规范。结果:年龄越大,在所有测试中表现越差呈线性相关。没有发现性别差异。我们发现,在较高的年龄阶段,受教育程度与考试成绩之间的正相关关系有所减弱。然而,这种互动效应被发现是由受教育程度低的参与者驱动的。我们验证的建议规范比现有规范更适合观察数据。结论:各项指标均经年龄调整。由于该模型的拟合性稍好,因此为TMT B/A提供了没有年龄调整的规范。结果表明:(i)只有处理速度而不是设置转移随年龄而下降;(ii)教育的选择过程可能比实际教育对老年表现更重要。
New regression-based norms for the Trail Making Test on Norwegian older adults: Understanding the effect of education.
Objective: To produce regression-based norms for older adults on the revised Trail Making Test with alphabet support (TMT-NR3). By examining the potential modulating effects and putative interaction effects of age, education, and sex, we aim to gain insights into cognitive aging and the effects of education. Method: Altogether, 440 healthy participants with an age-span from 70 to 92 years from the NorFAST (n = 249) and the HUNT (n = 191) studies were included. Regression-based norms for TMT-A, TMT-B, and derived measures TMT B-A, TMT B/A, and TMT-β were produced. Models were assessed for pertinent linear, curvilinear, or interaction effects of age, education, and sex. We evaluated and compared our norms to published North American TMT norms. Results: Higher age was linearly associated with lower performance on all measures. No sex differences were found. We found a reduced positive association with education on test performance at higher age. However, this interaction effect was found to be driven by participants with low education. Our validated proposed norms showed a better fit to observed data than the existing norms. Conclusion: The norms were adjusted for age on all measures. Norms without age adjustment are made available for TMT B/A due to a slightly better fit of this model. The results indicate (i) that only processing speed and not set-shifting declines with age and (ii) that the selection process for education might be more important than actual education for older-age performance.
期刊介绍:
The Clinical Neuropsychologist (TCN) serves as the premier forum for (1) state-of-the-art clinically-relevant scientific research, (2) in-depth professional discussions of matters germane to evidence-based practice, and (3) clinical case studies in neuropsychology. Of particular interest are papers that can make definitive statements about a given topic (thereby having implications for the standards of clinical practice) and those with the potential to expand today’s clinical frontiers. Research on all age groups, and on both clinical and normal populations, is considered.