Cognitive Component Structure of a Neuropsychological Battery Administered to Cognitively-Normal Adults in the SIU Longitudinal Cognitive Aging Study

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Abstract

We used principal component analysis (PCA) to examine the component structure of a neuropsychological test battery administered to 943 cognitively-normal adults enrolled in the Southern Illinois University (SIU) Longitudinal Cognitive Aging Study (LCAS). Four components explaining the most variance (63.9%) in the dataset were identified: speed/cognitive flexibility, visuospatial skills, word-list learning/memory, and story memory. Regression analyses confirmed that increased age was associated with decreased component scores after controlling for gender and education. Our identified components differ slightly from previous studies using PCA on similar test batteries. Factors such as the demographic characteristics of the study sample, the inclusion of mixed patient and control samples, the inclusion of different test measures in previous studies, and the fact that many neuropsychological test measures assess multiple cognitive processes simultaneously, may help to explain these inconsistencies.

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Hollinshead, M. G., Botchway, A., Schmidt, K. E., Weybright, G. L., Zec, R. F., Ala, T. A., … Trivedi, M. A. (2022). Cognitive Component Structure of a Neuropsychological Battery Administered to Cognitively-Normal Adults in the SIU Longitudinal Cognitive Aging Study. Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, 8. https://doi.org/10.1177/23337214221130157

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