African Enculturation and Performance on the African Neuropsychological Battery

  • Ikanga J
  • Braggs P
  • Howard C
  • et al.
N/ACitations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

To test a core assumption of the African Neuropsychology Battery (ANB) that greater African enculturation is associated with better performance.Subjects were 27 African immigrants to the U.S. [mean age = 39 (SD = 11.5), mean education = 16.3 years (SD = 2.9)], 32 African-Americans [mean age = 34.0 (SD = 11.2), mean education = 16.2 (SD = 2.5)], and 21 U.S. Caucasians [mean age = 45.7 (SD = 13.8), mean education = 17.2 (SD = 2.3)]. All subjects completed a questionnaire on familiarity with elements of African culture. The ANB was administered one-on-one, by trained technicians, in English, in a single session. ANB tests measured visuospatial perception, naming, memory, and abstract reasoning utilizing content drawn from sub-Saharan African cultures.Groups differed significantly in age (p < .05), but not education or gender, and age was used as a covariate in subsequent group comparisons. African immigrants showed highest African enculturation, followed by African Americans, and Caucasians [F(2, 74) = 36.16, p < .000], with all groups differing significantly from one another in post-hoc comparisons (p < .02). African enculturation correlated significantly only with ability to identify pictures of African fruits (Pearson r = .58, p < .001) and objects (r = .25, p < .03). Analysis of Covariance followed by Bonferroni post-hoc comparisons confirmed that African immigrants were superior to Caucasians (p < .001) and African-Americans (p < .001) in identifying fruits, with the latter two groups not differing significantly from one another. African immigrants were superior to Caucasians in object identification (p < .05), but did not differ significantly from African-Americans.African enculturation influences performance on some ANB tests and results support the potential of the ANB to assess performance in a less culturally-biased manner in African immigrants.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ikanga, J., Braggs, P., Howard, C., & Stringer, A. (2019). African Enculturation and Performance on the African Neuropsychological Battery. Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, 34(6), 858–858. https://doi.org/10.1093/arclin/acz035.26

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free