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Normative Data for a Tablet-Based Dual-Task Assessment in Healthy Older Adults

Maxime Lussier, Kathia Saillant, Tudor Vrinceanu, Carol Hudon, Louis Bherer

2020Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to provide normative data for a tablet-based dual-task assessment in older adults without cognitive deficits. METHOD: In total, 264 participants aged between 60 and 90 years, French and English-speaking, were asked to perform two discrimination tasks, alone and concurrently. The participants had to answer as fast as possible to one or two images appearing in the center of the tablet by pressing to the corresponding buttons. Normative data are provided for reaction time (RT), coefficient of variation, and accuracy. Analyses of variance were performed by trial types (single-pure, single-mixed, dual-mixed), and linear regressions assessed the relationship between performance and sociodemographic characteristics. RESULTS: The participants were highly educated and a large proportion of them were women (73.9%). The accuracy on the task was very high across all blocks. RT data revealed both a task-set cost and a dual-task cost between the blocks. Age was associated with slower RT and with higher coefficient of variability. Men were significantly slower on dual-mixed trials, but their coefficient of variability was lower on single-pure trials. Education was not associated with performance. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides normative data for a tablet-based dual-task assessment in older adults without cognitive impairment, which was lacking. All participants completed the task with good accuracy in less than 15 minutes and thus, the task is transferable to clinical and research settings.

Topics & Concepts

NormativeTask (project management)CognitionDual (grammatical number)PsychologySet (abstract data type)Analysis of varianceAudiologyDevelopmental psychologyMedicineComputer sciencePsychiatryInternal medicineManagementProgramming languageEpistemologyEconomicsArtLiteraturePhilosophyOccupational Therapy Practice and ResearchFrailty in Older AdultsOlder Adults Driving Studies