Abstract
Generalizability considerations are widely discussed and a core foundation for understanding when and why treatment effects will replicate across sample demographics. However, guidelines on assessing and reporting generalizability-related factors differ across fields and are inconsistently applied. This paper synthesizes obstacles and best practices to apply recent work on measurement and sample diversity. We present a brief history of how knowledge in psychology has been constructed, with implications for who has been historically prioritized in research. We then review how generalizability remains a contemporary threat to neuropsychological assessment and outline best practices for researchers and clinical neuropsychologists. In doing so, we provide concrete tools to evaluate whether a given assessment is generalizable across populations and assist researchers in effectively testing and reporting treatment differences across sample demographics.
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CITATION STYLE
Malik, H. B., & Norman, J. B. (2023). Best practices and methodological strategies for addressing generalizability in neuropsychological assessment. Journal of Pediatric Neuropsychology, 9(2), 47–63. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40817-023-00145-5
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