This study confirms the association of basic and derived TMT raw scores with sociodemographic variables and provides updated correction grids and ES for assessing the attentional/executive functions in clinical and research fields.Īssessment Attention Dementia Executive functions Norms Trail Making Test.
Basic and derived TMT scores showed a good test-retest reliability (all r s ≥ 0.50) Part B (r s = - 0.48, p < 0.001) and Score B-A (r s = - 0.49, p < 0.001) were moderately associated with MoCA total score. The MoCA-Memory Index Score: An Efficient Alternative to Paragraph Recall for the Detection of Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment.
2005 Apr 53 (4):695-9 ( PubMed abstract) Kaur A, Edland SD, Peavy GM. Inferential cutoff scores, estimated using a non-parametric technique, and ES were computed. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment-Filipino Version (MoCA-P Dominguez et al., 2013) was adapted and translated from the original MoCA (Nasreddine et al., 2005), developed to aid clinicians in detecting mild cognitive impairment and early Alzheimers disease. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment, MoCA: a brief screening tool for mild cognitive impairment. From the derived linear equations, correction grids for basic and derived TMT raw scores were developed. Multiple linear regression analyses revealed that age and educational level significantly influenced performances on basic and derived TMT scores except for B/A, which was associated only with the educational level. Three hundred fifty-five Italian volunteers stratified for sex (166 men), age decades (age range 20-90 years), and educational level (from primary school to university) completed the TMT and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). Since the regression-based norms and equivalent scores (ESs) for the TMT Italian version trace back to more than 20 years ago, we aimed at providing updated normative data for basic (Part A and Part B) and derived (Score B-A and Score B/A) TMT scores collected in a larger sample with an extended age range. Read the article MoCA 7. The Trail Making Test (TMT) is widely used to assess psychomotor speed and attentional set-shifting. Article on MoCA 7.1: Multicenter Validation of the First Italian Version of Montreal Cognitive Assessment, published in Journal of Alzheimers Disease Reports 6 on by Alessandro Pirani+9.