Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Psicobiología y Metodología en Ciencias del Comportamiento Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid Spain
2. Department of Psychology University of Cadiz (UCA) Cadiz Spain
3. Instituto de Investigación e Innovación Biomédica de Cádiz (INiBICA) Cadiz Spain
4. Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond VA USA
5. Tecnológico de Antioquia—Institución Universitaria Medellín Colombia
6. Facultad de Psicología Universidad Antonio Nariño Ibagué Colombia
7. Departamento de Ciencias de la Salud Universidad Pública de Navarra Pamplona Navarra Spain
8. Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria de Navarra (IdiSNA) Pamplona Navarra Spain
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundVerbal fluency tests (VFT) are highly sensitive to cognitive deficits. Usually, the score on VFT is based on the number of correct words produced, yet it alone gives little information regarding underlying test performance. The implementation of different strategies (cluster and switching) to perform efficiently during the tasks provide more valuable information. However, normative data for clustering and switching strategies are scarce. Moreover, scoring criteria adapted to Colombian Spanish are missing.Aims(1) To describe the Colombian adaptation of the scoring system guidelines for clustering and switching strategies in VFT; (2) to determine its reliability; and (3) to provide normative data for Colombian children and adolescents aged 6–17 years.Methods & ProceduresA total of 691 children and adolescents from Colombia completed phonological (/f/, /a/, /s/, /m/, /r/ and /p/) and semantic (animals and fruits) VFT, and five scores were calculated: total score (TS), number of clusters (NC), cluster size (CS), mean cluster size (MCS) and number of switches (NS). The intraclass correlation coefficient was used for interrater reliability. Hierarchical multiple regressions were conducted to investigate which strategies were associated with VFT TS. Multiple regressions were conducted for each strategy, including as predictors age, age2, sex, mean parents’ education (MPE), MPE2 and type of school, to generate normative data.Outcomes & ResultsReliability indexes were excellent. Age was associated with VFT TS, but weakly compared with strategies. For both VFT TS, NS was the strongest variable, followed by CS and NC. Regarding norms, age was the strongest predictor for all measures, while age2 was relevant for NC (/f/ phoneme) and NS (/m/ phoneme). Participants with higher MPE obtained more NC, and NS, and larger CS in several phonemes and categories. Children and adolescents from private school generated more NC, NS and larger CS in /s/ phoneme.Conclusions & ImplicationsThis study provides new scoring guidelines and normative data for clustering and switching strategies for Colombian children and adolescents between 6 and 17 years old. Clinical neuropsychologists should include these measures as part of their everyday practice.WHAT THIS PAPER ADDSWhat is already known on the subject
VFT are widely used within the paediatric population due to its sensitivity to brain injury. Its score is based on the number of correct words produced; however, TS alone gives little information regarding underlying test performance. Several normative data for VFT TS in the paediatric population exist, but normative data for clustering and switching strategies are scarce.What this paper adds to existing knowledge
The present study is the first to describe the Colombian adaptation of the scoring guidelines for clustering and switching strategies, and provided normative data for these strategies for children and adolescents between 6 and 17 years old.What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?
Knowing VFT's performance, including strategy development and use in healthy children and adolescents, may be useful for clinical settings. We encourage clinicians to include not only TS, but also a careful analysis of strategies that may be more informative of the underlying cognitive processes failure than TS.
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics