Normative Data for the Spanish Versions of the CVLT, WMS-Logical Memory, and RBMT From a Sample of Middle-Aged and Old Participants
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American Psychological Association
Abstract
Episodic memory (EM), one of the most commonly assessed cognitive domains in aging, is useful for identifying pathological processes such as mild cognitive impairment and dementia. However, EM tests must be culturally adapted, and the influence of sociodemographic variables analyzed, to provide cut-off points that enable correct diagnosis. The aim of this article is to report updated Spanish normative data for three EM tests: the California Verbal Learning Test, the Logical Memory subtest of theWechsler Memory Test, and the Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test. Measures include immediate, short-, and long-delay free recall, intrusions, and global scores. The entire sample is comprised of 1,193 cognitively unimpaired participants aged +50, recruited from three cohort studies within the Spanish Consortium for Ageing Normative Data. Participants who subsequently developed cognitive impairment, detected at follow-up, were removed from the total sample. Data analysis included transformation of percentile ranges into scalar scores, tests for the effects of education level, age, and sex on performance, and linear regression to calculate scalar adjustments.
Tables with percentile ranges and scalar scores for each measure are provided, with adjustments for age, education level, and sex, as required. The normative scores provide robust data for assessing EM in Spanish middle-aged and old populations. Effects of sex, age, and education level in each measure are discussedEpisodic memory (EM), one of the most commonly assessed cognitive domains in aging, is useful for identifying pathological processes such as mild cognitive impairment and dementia. However,EMtests must be culturally adapted, and the influence of sociodemographic variables analyzed, to provide cut-off points that enable correct diagnosis. The aim of this article is to report updated Spanish normative data for three EM tests: the California Verbal Learning Test, the Logical Memory subtest of theWechsler Memory Test, and the Rivermead Behavioral Memory Test. Measures include immediate, short-, and long-delay free recall, intrusions, and global scores. The entire sample is comprised of 1,193 cognitively unimpaired participants aged +50, recruited from three cohort studies within the Spanish Consortium for Ageing Normative Data.
Participants who subsequently developed cognitive impairment, detected at follow-up, were removed from the total sample. Data analysis included transformation of percentile ranges into scalar scores, tests for the effects of education level, age, and sex on performance, and linear regression to calculate scalar adjustments.
Tables with percentile ranges and scalar scores for each measure are provided, with adjustments for age, education level, and sex, as required. The normative scores provide robust data for assessing EM in Spanish middle-aged and old populations. Effects of sex, age, and education level in each measure are discussed.
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This paper is not the copy of record and may not exactly replicate the authoritative document published in the APA journal. The final article is available, upon publication, at: https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0001292
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Campos-Magdaleno, M., Nieto-Vieites, A., Frades-Payo, B., Montenegro-Peña, M., Facal, D., Lojo-Seoane, C., & Delgado-Losada, M. L. (2023). Normative data from the Spanish versions of the CVLT, WMS-Logical Memory, and RBMT from a sample of middle-aged and old participants. Psychological Assessment, 36(2), 114-123.
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https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0001292Sponsors
This research was funded by Complutense University of Madrid and the Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience thought Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (project numbers PSI2009-14415-C03-01, PSI2012-38375-C03-01, PSI2015-68793-C3-1-R and RTI2018-098762-B-C31); by the Vallecas Project thought Reina Sofía Foundation and PILEP+90 financed by Fundación General de la Universidad de Salamanca (FGUSAL)-CENIE with the Interreg V-A Program, Spain-Portugal (POCTEP) 2014-2020; by the Compostela Aging Study of the University of Santiago de Compostela, financially supported through FEDER founds (“A way to make Europe”) by the Spanish AEI (Doi: 10.13039/501100011033; Refs. PID2020-114521RBC21 and PSI2017-89389-C2-1-R); and by Galician Government (Consellería de Cultura, Educación e Ordenación Universitaria axudas para a consolidación e estruturación de unidades de investigación competitivas do Sistema Universitario de Galicia ED431C 2021/04; GI-1807- USC: Ref. 2021-PG011).
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© American Psychological Association, 2023








