Abstract

There is a need for rapid and reliable Internet-based screening tools for cognitive assessment in middle-aged and older adults. We report the psychometric properties of an on-line tool designed to screen for cognitive deficits that require further investigation. The tool is composed of measures of memory and executive attention processes known to be sensitive to brain changes associated with aging and with cognitive disorders that become more prevalent with age. Measures included a Spatial Working Memory task, Stroop Interference task, Face-Name Association task, and Number-Letter Alternation task. Normative data were collected from 361 healthy adults age 50–79 who scored in the normal range on a standardized measure of general cognitive ability. Participants took the 20-minute on-line test on their home computers, and a subset of 288 participants repeated the test 1 week later. Analyses of the individual tasks indicated adequate internal consistency, construct validity, test-retest reliability, and alternate version reliability. As expected, scores were correlated with age. The four tasks loaded on the same principle component. Demographically-corrected z-scores from the individual tasks were combined to create an overall score, which showed good reliability and classification consistency. These results indicate the tool may be useful for identifying middle-aged and older adults with lower than expected scores who may benefit from clinical evaluation of their cognition by a health care professional.

Highlights

  • Life expectancy is increasing globally (World Health Organization, 2014), creating an older adult population that is rapidly growing

  • Other tests have been used in very large numbers to evaluate cognitive training gains, but do not yet have published studies supporting the psychometric properties of the tests themselves

  • Another test (Lee et al, 2012) includes 13 measures that correlate with age and load onto two separate factors of processing speed and memory; reliability data are not provided for the composite scores or individual subtests

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Summary

Introduction

Life expectancy is increasing globally (World Health Organization, 2014), creating an older adult population that is rapidly growing. With increased access to computers and the Internet, among older adults (Wagner et al, 2010), interactive web-based cognitive assessment that identifies individuals in need of further evaluation has become more feasible and has the potential to be extremely useful. With this in mind, we created and evaluated a self-administered on-line cognitive screening tool for middle-aged and older adults. Another test (Lee et al, 2012) includes 13 measures that correlate with age and load onto two separate factors of processing speed and memory; reliability data are not provided for the composite scores or individual subtests

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