Performance of elderly white and African American community residents on the abbreviated CERAD Boston naming test
- 1 April 1997
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology
- Vol. 19 (2) , 204-210
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01688639708403851
Abstract
Differences in the responses of an elderly biracial group of cognitively normal subjects to a 15-item short version of the Boston Naming Test developed for the Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD) were examined. The subjects consisted of 103 Whites and 136 African Americans who were 70 years of age and older and living in a five-county urban and rural area of North Carolina. They were drawn from the Duke University site of the Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly (EPESE). All were cognitively normal. With gender, years of education, and age controlled, White subjects performed significantly better than did African American subjects. The items in this test were selected to represent words with a high, medium, and low frequency of occurrence in English. They did not, however, show the expected gradation for either racial group. Medium and low frequency items were of comparable difficulty for the two races. Hierarchical ordering of difficulty would be improved with minor rearrangement of items.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preliminary normative data on the Boston naming test for an older urban populationThe Clinical Neuropsychologist, 1994
- Cognitive deficits of men and women with Alzheimer's diseaseNeurology, 1994
- A Comparative Analysis of Neuropsychological Test Performance of Spanish-Speaking and English-Speaking Patients With Alzheimer's DiseaseJournal of Gerontology, 1993
- Boston Naming Test: Shortened Versions for Use in Alzheimer's DiseaseJournal of Gerontology, 1992
- Effects of Age, Gender, and Education on Cognitive Tests in a Rural Elderly Community Sample: Norms from the Monongahela Valley Independent Elders SurveyNeuroepidemiology, 1991
- Naming consistency in Alzheimer's diseaseBrain and Language, 1990
- Use of the Mini-mental State Examination in a Probability Sample of a Hispanic PopulationJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1987
- Use of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) in a Community Population of Mixed EthnicityJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1986
- Performance of normal elderly on the Boston Naming TestBrain and Language, 1986
- “Mini-mental state”Journal of Psychiatric Research, 1975