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Demographically adjusted trail making test norms in a Scandinavian sample from 41 to 84 years

Jacob Espenes, Erik Hessen, Ingvild Vøllo Eliassen, Knut Waterloo, Marie Eckerström, Sigrid Botne Sando, Santiago Timón‐Reina, Anders Wallin, Tormod Fladby, Bjørn‐Eivind Kirsebom

2020The Clinical Neuropsychologist44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective The trail making test (TMT) is one of the most widely used neuropsychological tests. TMT-A provides measures of visual scanning/visuomotor speed and TMT-B involves additional demands on executive functions. Derived scores TMT B-A and TMT B/A enhance measures of executive functioning. However, simple B-A subtraction may lead to false estimates of executive dysfunction in clinical samples. Norms for TMT have been published in several countries but are currently lacking for Scandinavia.Methods A total of 292 healthy controls between age 41 and 84 years were included from the Norwegian “Dementia Disease Initiation” (DDI) study (n = 170) and the Gothenburg Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) study (n = 122). We used a regression-based procedure to develop demographically adjusted norms for basic (TMT-A and TMT-B) and derived measures (TMT B-A and B/A). We also propose a regression-based alternative to the TMT B-A measure named “TMT-β”. The proposed norms were compared to norms from Heaton et al. and Tombaugh.Results Due to differences in the estimated normative effects of demographics on performance, the proposed norms for TMT were better suited in the Scandinavian sample compared with published non-Scandinavian norms. The proposed TMT-β measure was highly correlated to TMT B-A (r = 0.969, p < 0.001).Conclusion We here propose demographically adjusted norms for the TMT for ages 41 through 84 years based on a Scandinavian sample. We also present the regression-based derived measure TMT-β which may resolve issues with the conventional TMT B-A measure.

Topics & Concepts

Trail Making TestPsychologyNeuropsychologyNormativeExecutive functionsExecutive dysfunctionNorwegianDementiaNeuropsychological testCognitionClinical psychologyDemographyDevelopmental psychologyMedicinePsychiatryDiseaseInternal medicineEpistemologySociologyLinguisticsPhilosophySpatial Neglect and Hemispheric DysfunctionDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury Research