Reading ability mediates the relationship between education and executive function tasks

被引:27
作者
Johnson, AS [1 ]
Flicker, LJ [1 ]
Lichtenberg, PA [1 ]
机构
[1] Henry Ford Hosp, Inst Gerontol, Detroit, MI 48202 USA
关键词
literacy; dementia; norms; educational quality; African Americans; aged;
D O I
10.1017/S1355617706060073
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Neuropsychological test results are affected by multiple factors, but usually age and education are the only variables by which norms are stratified. Some authors have questioned whether these variables alone are sufficient (e.g., Marcopulos et al., 1997; Manly et al., 2002), since such norms have lead to problems, such as poor specificity for African Americans on dementia screening devices (Fillenbaum et al., 1990). Recent research has shown that reading ability, a measure of educational quality, attenuated racial differences in test performance (Manly et al., 2002). We specifically examined whether reading ability would account for a greater amount of variance than education in executive function tests in a population traditionally subject to poor educational quality. Results determined that reading ability accounted for a significantly greater amount of variance than years of education for Letter-Number Sequencing, Similarities, COWA, Trail Making Test, and Coloured Progressive Matrices. Reading ability was found to significantly mediate the relationship between each of these tests and education. Animal naming appears to be least affected by educational quality or quantity. These findings hold implications for the interpretation of neuropsychological test results, especially in those exposed to substandard educational quality, and for the way that test norms are constructed.
引用
收藏
页码:64 / 71
页数:8
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]   Reading ability, education, and cognitive status assessment among older adults in Harlem, New York City [J].
Albert, SM ;
Teresi, JA .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1999, 89 (01) :95-97
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1985, HALSTEAD REITAN NEUR
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2004, Neuropsychological Assessment
[4]  
Benton AL., 1976, MULTILINGUAL APHASIA
[5]  
CHAPLEWSKI E, 2002, FACING FUTURE CITY D
[6]  
Diaz-Asper CM, 2004, J INT NEUROPSYCH SOC, V10, P82
[7]  
Double KL, 1996, NEUROBIOL AGING, V17, P513
[8]   SENSITIVITY AND SPECIFICITY OF STANDARDIZED SCREENS OF COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT AND DEMENTIA AMONG ELDERLY BLACK-AND-WHITE COMMUNITY RESIDENTS [J].
FILLENBAUM, G ;
HEYMAN, A ;
WILLIAMS, K ;
PROSNITZ, B ;
BURCHETT, B .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1990, 43 (07) :651-660
[9]   Dementia and race: Are there differences between African Americans and Caucasians? [J].
Froehlich, TE ;
Bogardus, ST ;
Inouye, SK .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2001, 49 (04) :477-484
[10]   Different underlying mechanisms for deficits in concept formation in dementia [J].
Giovannetti, T ;
Lamar, M ;
Cloud, BS ;
Swenson, R ;
Fein, D ;
Kaplan, E ;
Libon, DJ .
ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 16 (06) :547-560