Online Self-Administered Cognitive Testing Using the Amsterdam Cognition Scan: Establishing Psychometric Properties and Normative Data
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| Publication date | 05-2018 |
| Journal | Journal of Medical Internet Research |
| Article number | e192 |
| Volume | Issue number | 20 | 5 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
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| Abstract |
Background: Online tests
enable efficient self-administered assessments and consequently
facilitate large-scale data collection for many fields of research. The
Amsterdam Cognition Scan is a new online neuropsychological test battery
that measures a broad variety of cognitive functions. Objective: The
aims of this study were to evaluate the psychometric properties of the
Amsterdam Cognition Scan and to establish regression-based normative
data. Methods: The
Amsterdam Cognition Scan was self-administrated twice from home—with an
interval of 6 weeks—by 248 healthy Dutch-speaking adults aged 18 to 81
years. Results: Test-retest
reliability was moderate to high and comparable with that of equivalent
traditional tests (intraclass correlation coefficients: .45 to .80; .83
for the Amsterdam Cognition Scan total score). Multiple regression
analyses indicated that (1) participants’ age negatively influenced all
(12) cognitive measures, (2) gender was associated with performance on
six measures, and (3) education level was positively associated with
performance on four measures. In addition, we observed influences of
tested computer skills and of self-reported amount of computer use on
cognitive performance. Demographic characteristics that proved to
influence Amsterdam Cognition Scan test performance were included in
regression-based predictive formulas to establish demographically
adjusted normative data. Conclusions: Initial results from a healthy adult sample indicate that the Amsterdam Cognition Scan has high usability and can give reliable measures of various generic cognitive ability areas. For future use, the influence of computer skills and experience should be further studied, and for repeated measurements, computer configuration should be consistent. The reported normative data allow for initial interpretation of Amsterdam Cognition Scan performances. |
| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9298 |
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