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You Say Tomato, I Say Radish: Can Brief Cognitive Assessments in the U.S. Health Retirement Study Be Harmonized With Its International Partner Studies?

Lindsay C. Kobayashi, Alden L. Gross, Laura E. Gibbons, Doug Tommet, R. Elizabeth Sanders, Seo‐Eun Choi, Shubhabrata Mukherjee, M. Maria Glymour, Jennifer J. Manly, Lisa Berkman, Paul K. Crane, Dan Mungas, Richard N. Jones

2020The Journals of Gerontology Series B37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To characterize the extent to which brief cognitive assessments administered in the population-representative U.S. Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and its International Partner Studies can be considered to be measuring a single, unidimensional latent cognitive function construct. METHODS: Cognitive function assessments were administered in face-to-face interviews in 12 studies in 26 countries (N = 155,690), including the U.S. HRS and selected International Partner Studies. We used the time point of the first cognitive assessment for each study to minimize differential practice effects across studies and documented cognitive test item coverage across studies. Using confirmatory factor analysis models, we estimated single-factor general cognitive function models and bifactor models representing memory-specific and nonmemory-specific cognitive domains for each study. We evaluated model fits and factor loadings across studies. RESULTS: Despite relatively sparse and inconsistent cognitive item coverage across studies, all studies had some cognitive test items in common with other studies. In all studies, the bifactor models with a memory-specific domain fit better than single-factor general cognitive function models. The data fit the models at reasonable thresholds for single-factor models in 6 of the 12 studies and for the bifactor models in all 12 of the 12 studies. DISCUSSION: The cognitive assessments in the U.S. HRS and its International Partner Studies reflect comparable underlying cognitive constructs. We discuss the assumptions underlying our methods, present alternatives, and future directions for cross-national harmonization of cognitive aging data.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionPsychologyConfirmatory factor analysisCognitive testPopulationCognitive psychologyEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceConstruct (python library)Clinical psychologyDevelopmental psychologyStructural equation modelingMedicineComputer scienceMachine learningPsychiatryEnvironmental healthProgramming languageDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchCognitive Abilities and TestingPsychometric Methodologies and Testing