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The 30-item and 15-item Boston naming test Czech version: Item response analysis and normative values for healthy older adults

Ondřej Bezdíček, Anna Marie Rosická, Josef Mana, David J. Libon, Miloslav Kopeček, Hana Georgi

2021Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Objective The Boston Naming Test (BNT) is the most widely used test to assess visual confrontation naming in both research and clinical settings. Recently, an abbreviated Czech version of the BNT was described. The purpose of this study is to assess the validity of this new test at the item level with advanced psychometric methods to assess its equivalence with the original test. The rationale was to help busy clinicians in the differential diagnosis of language disorders.Method We administered the BNT-30 (odd item form of BNT-60) (N = 535; 75.61 ± 9.11; 60–96 years) and shortened the BNT-15 (N = 754; 71.94 ± 7.88; 60–96 years) to a large sample of healthy older adults.Results Significant but low associations between BNT performance and age, education, and sex were found. We found strong evidence for the unidimensionality of both BNT-15/BNT-30 versions in healthy adults (p’s < .001).Conclusion In-depth psychometric analysis of the BNT-15 and BNT-30 Czech versions show that test stimuli function in a similar fashion as the original BNT. Normative values adjusting for the influence of age, education, and sex are provided for use in clinical settings and future cross-cultural comparisons.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyNormativeItem response theoryPsychometricsBoston Naming TestTest (biology)Item analysisCzechDevelopmental psychologyShort FormsTest validityValidation testClinical psychologyCognitive psychologyCognitionNeuropsychologyPsychiatryLinguisticsEpistemologyBiologyPaleontologyPhilosophyNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismLanguage Development and DisordersPsychological Testing and Assessment
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