The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test

Numerous studies have suggested that neuropsychological test performance is affected by demographic variables such as age and education. This study examined the effects of age and education on the Trail Making Test, the Digit Symbol Sub-Test, and the Finger Tapping Test in a non-clinical sample of c...

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Main Author: Stewart, Maureen
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004601
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-31142018-06-08T04:07:33ZThe effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping testStewart, MaureenAging -- Psychological testingBrain -- AgingNeuropsychologyNeuropsychological testsNumerous studies have suggested that neuropsychological test performance is affected by demographic variables such as age and education. This study examined the effects of age and education on the Trail Making Test, the Digit Symbol Sub-Test, and the Finger Tapping Test in a non-clinical sample of community dwellers with a relatively low level of education (8 to 12 years) in South Africa. The sample consisted of 161 participants across six age groups: 20-39, 40-59, 69-69, 70-79, 80-89 and 90-95 years. Results were examined for mean age effects and variability trends. Highly significant age effects were present across the age groups for all tests, however, there was no uniform pattern of variability across the tests. The Digit Symbol Substitution Test and the Finger Tapping Tests showed a pattern of increasing variability with increasing age, followed by a decrease in very old age while no trend was evident for the Digit Symbol extensions (the Immediate and Delayed Recall tests). The Trail Making Test, Parts A and B, showed a consistent trend of increasing variability across the age groups. Data from the present study was compared with existing data from two relatively high education samples, with equivalent age groupings, to examine education effects. Results showed an education effect for all tests with the high education groups outperforming the low education groups. Although the effects of education became less potent with advancing age, the mean performance of the oldest (80-89 years) high education age group was superior to that of the equivalent low education age group. Comparison of variability trends across both samples showed that the highest variability (the shuttle bulge) was present at the same point along the age axis, or at a later point, for the low education group, as that for the high education group. This finding is inconsistent with Jordan's (1997) 'shuttle model of variability' which predicts an earlier occurrence of the shuttle bulge (left shuttle shift effect) for a low education sample. This study demonstrated that performance on neuropsychological tests is influenced by age and education and highlighted the dangers inherent in unquestionably applying norms, which have not been corrected for age and education, when assessing the older adult.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Humanities, Psychology2003ThesisMastersMA165 pagespdfvital:3114http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004601EnglishStewart, Maureen
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Aging -- Psychological testing
Brain -- Aging
Neuropsychology
Neuropsychological tests
spellingShingle Aging -- Psychological testing
Brain -- Aging
Neuropsychology
Neuropsychological tests
Stewart, Maureen
The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
description Numerous studies have suggested that neuropsychological test performance is affected by demographic variables such as age and education. This study examined the effects of age and education on the Trail Making Test, the Digit Symbol Sub-Test, and the Finger Tapping Test in a non-clinical sample of community dwellers with a relatively low level of education (8 to 12 years) in South Africa. The sample consisted of 161 participants across six age groups: 20-39, 40-59, 69-69, 70-79, 80-89 and 90-95 years. Results were examined for mean age effects and variability trends. Highly significant age effects were present across the age groups for all tests, however, there was no uniform pattern of variability across the tests. The Digit Symbol Substitution Test and the Finger Tapping Tests showed a pattern of increasing variability with increasing age, followed by a decrease in very old age while no trend was evident for the Digit Symbol extensions (the Immediate and Delayed Recall tests). The Trail Making Test, Parts A and B, showed a consistent trend of increasing variability across the age groups. Data from the present study was compared with existing data from two relatively high education samples, with equivalent age groupings, to examine education effects. Results showed an education effect for all tests with the high education groups outperforming the low education groups. Although the effects of education became less potent with advancing age, the mean performance of the oldest (80-89 years) high education age group was superior to that of the equivalent low education age group. Comparison of variability trends across both samples showed that the highest variability (the shuttle bulge) was present at the same point along the age axis, or at a later point, for the low education group, as that for the high education group. This finding is inconsistent with Jordan's (1997) 'shuttle model of variability' which predicts an earlier occurrence of the shuttle bulge (left shuttle shift effect) for a low education sample. This study demonstrated that performance on neuropsychological tests is influenced by age and education and highlighted the dangers inherent in unquestionably applying norms, which have not been corrected for age and education, when assessing the older adult. === ===
author Stewart, Maureen
author_facet Stewart, Maureen
author_sort Stewart, Maureen
title The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
title_short The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
title_full The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
title_fullStr The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
title_full_unstemmed The effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
title_sort effects of age and education on selected cognitive tests: the trail making test, the digit symbol sub-test, and the finger tapping test
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004601
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