[法语使用者病前智力水平的评估]
[The estimation of premorbid intelligence levels in French speakers].
作者信息
Mackinnon A, Mulligan R
机构信息
Centre for Mental Health Research, Building 63, Australian National University, Canberray, ACT 0200, Australia.
出版信息
Encephale. 2005 Jan-Feb;31(1 Pt 1):31-43. doi: 10.1016/s0013-7006(05)82370-x.
UNLABELLED
Knowledge of cognitive performance earlier in life is essential in order to characterize precisely the extent to which these abilities have declined when an individual is diagnosed as having a dementing illness. The National Adult Reading Test (NART) was developed by Nelson and O'Connell to estimate premorbid intellectual ability in patients suffering from intellectual deterioration due to dementia. The test consists of 50 words, graded in difficulty, whose pronunciation cannot be determined from their spelling. The ability to successfully read irregularly spelt words is relatively robust in the face of current cognitive impairment and is a sensitive marker of intellectual attainment. Because the NART relies on orthographic irregularities in the English language, the construction of analogues of the test in other languages is not simply a matter of translation of the test content. Rather, words in the target language that have comparable properties to those in the NART must be sought. A French adaptation of the NART--the fNART--was developed by Bovet and calibrated on a small French-speaking Swiss sample. In a sample of 30 nondemented subjects, number of words pronounced correctly correlated highly with WAIS-R verbal and total IQ scores and less strongly with performance IQ (r = 0.43). Data available from an epidemiological survey undertaken in Geneva, Switzerland provided an opportunity to establish the measurement properties and construct validity of the fNART in a large sample unselected with respect to cognitive decline. In addition to the fNART, the survey incorporated a brief test battery assessing the domains of crystallized intelligence, memory and cognitive speed. An interview that enabled the diagnosis of dementia according to DSM IV criteria, the Mini Mental State Examination and the Psychogeriatric Assessment Scales (PAS) were also administered. If the fNART measures intellectual ability, substantial correlations between it and the test battery would be expected. Further validation of the test was sought by exploring its relation with years of education. The stability of the fNART was assessed by comparing the scores of subjects with and without dementia, and by examining the relationship of fNART scores to an informant-based report of change in cognitive performance from earlier in life assessed in the PAS. If the fNART is stable in the face of cognitive deterioration, no between-group differences or association with reported cognitive change would be expected.
METHOD
Subjects were randomly selected from residents of the canton of Geneva aged over 65 years. The analyses reported here were undertaken on a sample of 368 persons who gave codable responses to at least 90% of the fNART items. They ranged in age from 65 to 94 years. Subjects were interviewed in their homes by trained lay interviewers.
RESULTS
Cronbach's alpha for the forty-item scale was high (0.89). The percentage of subjects correctly pronouncing words ranged from 7.3% for "chamsin" to 96.7% for "agenda". Item response theory (IRT) models were fitted to the data. In a three-parameter model the value of the guessing (asymptote) parameter was vanishing small for all items. Accordingly, a two-parameter model was adopted. The discriminating power (slope) of items ranged considerably from 0.281 (rébus) to 1.192 (béotien). The average slope was 0.656. This corresponds to average factor loading of 0.528 (range 0.270 to 0.766.) The items measure a broad range of ability (mean threshold--0.719, sd = 1.540). Most items, however, discriminate at moderate levels. The parameter values obtained in the current study were compared to those estimated in a French sample of persons at risk of dementia . The correlation between item pairs for slope and parameter estimates was 0.53 and 0.70 respectively. This indicated substantial concordance between the samples regarding the difficulty of the items, but some differences in the power of groups to differentiate ability. In particular, a small number of words that performed very well in the "at risk" sample showed more moderate discrimination in the current study. Scores on the fNART were correlated with measures of crystallised intelligence, memory and cognitive speed. All correlations were statistically significant. With all tests entered a regression equation the multiple correlation coefficient was 0.63. Mean fNART scores of those suffering from DSM IV dementia and those meeting only Criterion A (multiple cognitive deficits) were lower than those of subjects meeting neither set of criteria. However subjects in the first two groups were older than subjects in the undemented group and had significantly lower educational attainment. When these two factors were controlled in an analysis of covariance, the magnitude of the differences between the groups, while still overall significantly different, was substantially reduced. A similar pattern of results applied when psychometric measures of cognitive state--the MMSE and the PAS Cognitive Impairment Scale--were used instead of diagnostic categories. The partial correlations of the fNART with the MMSE and PAS cognitive impairment scale controlling for age and education were 0.25 (P < 0.01) and -0.33 (P < 0.01) respectively. fNART scores did not differ between the sexes, nor were they significantly correlated with PAS Depression, Stroke or Behaviour Change scales. There was a small but significant correlation between the fNART and informant-assessed Cognitive Decline on the PAS.
DISCUSSION
This study demonstrated the excellent measurement properties of a French adaptation of the National Adult Reading Test in a large probability sample of elderly native speakers and provided the first large-sample evidence to support the validity of the fNART as a test of intellectual functioning relatively robust to dementia status. The negligible values of the pseudo-guessing parameters suggest that the goal of choosing words whose pronunciation is not susceptible to guessing has been achieved. The average item discriminability was high and the words used covered the spectrum of ability. The finding of substantial relationships of cognitive performance and educational attainment with fNART scores is important in validating the test as a measure of premorbid cognitive ability. The low correlations of the fNART with informant-based assessment of cognitive decline and age support the fNART as being relative robust to decline in ability. The relationships observed in this French adaptation are comparable to those reported for the English instrument . However, subjects meeting DSM IV criteria for dementia or Criterion A only had lower scores than other subjects. Decline in NART scores with dementia has been observed, particularly in moderate and severe cases. Given that the mechanism of the fNART is the same as the NART it is to be expected that while generally robust to current dementia status, some decline in performance will occur with the progression of the disease. The relationships between the fNART and PAS scales was remarkably similar to those reported by Jorm et al. in an English-speaking sample between the PAS and NART. Although small, the correlation between the fNART and the PAS Cognitive Decline scale might have been expected to be non-significant if the measure were truly stable in the face of intellectual deterioration. However this correlation is mirrored in the original English instruments and may reflect the higher risk of dementia in persons of lower intellectual ability.
CONCLUSION
Further research is desirable to improve the precision of the calibration of the scale against the WAIS-R. Nevertheless, this study has demonstrated that the fNART is a reliable and valid method of assessing premorbid intellectual ability in French speakers.
未标注
了解个体早年的认知表现对于准确描述其被诊断为患有痴呆症时这些能力的下降程度至关重要。纳尔逊和奥康奈尔开发了国家成人阅读测试(NART),以评估因痴呆症导致智力衰退患者的病前智力水平。该测试由50个难度分级的单词组成,其发音不能根据拼写来确定。面对当前的认知障碍,成功读出拼写不规则单词的能力相对稳定,是智力水平的一个敏感指标。由于NART依赖于英语中的拼写不规则性,在其他语言中构建该测试的类似物并非只是简单地翻译测试内容。相反,必须在目标语言中寻找与NART中单词具有可比属性的单词。博韦开发了NART的法语改编版——fNART,并在一小群说法语的瑞士样本上进行了校准。在30名非痴呆受试者的样本中,正确读出的单词数量与韦氏成人智力量表修订版(WAIS-R)的语言和总智商得分高度相关,与操作智商的相关性较弱(r = 0.43)。瑞士日内瓦进行的一项流行病学调查所获得的数据,为在一个未因认知能力下降而进行选择的大样本中确定fNART的测量特性和结构效度提供了机会。除了fNART之外,该调查还纳入了一个简短的测试组,用于评估晶体智力、记忆和认知速度等领域。还进行了一次访谈,以便根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)标准、简易精神状态检查表(Mini Mental State Examination)和老年精神病评估量表(Psychogeriatric Assessment Scales,PAS)进行痴呆症诊断。如果fNART能够测量智力水平,预计它与测试组之间会有显著相关性。通过探索fNART与受教育年限的关系,对该测试进行了进一步验证。通过比较有和没有痴呆症受试者的得分,以及检查fNART得分与PAS中评估的早年认知表现变化的基于 informant 的报告之间的关系,来评估fNART的稳定性。如果fNART在面对认知衰退时是稳定的,预计组间不会有差异,也不会与报告的认知变化相关联。
方法
受试者从日内瓦州65岁以上的居民中随机选取。这里报告的分析是基于368名对至少90%的fNART项目给出可编码回答的样本进行的。他们的年龄在65岁至94岁之间。由经过培训的非专业访谈人员在受试者家中进行访谈。
结果
四十项量表的克朗巴哈系数(Cronbach's alpha)很高(0.89)。正确读出单词的受试者百分比从“chamsin”的7.3%到“agenda”的96.7%不等。对数据拟合了项目反应理论(IRT)模型。在一个三参数模型中,所有项目的猜测(渐近线)参数值都非常小。因此,采用了一个两参数模型。项目的区分能力(斜率)差异很大,从0.281(谜画猜谜)到1.192(比奥提亚人)。平均斜率为0.656。这对应于平均因子载荷为0.528(范围为0.270至0.766)。这些项目测量了广泛的能力(平均阈值——0.719,标准差 = 1.540)。然而,大多数项目的区分处于中等水平。将当前研究中获得的参数值与在一个有痴呆症风险的法国样本中估计的值进行了比较。项目对之间斜率和参数估计的相关性分别为0.53和0.70。这表明在项目难度方面样本之间有很大的一致性,但在区分能力的能力方面存在一些差异。特别是,在“有风险”样本中表现非常好的少数单词在当前研究中显示出更中等的区分度。fNART得分与晶体智力、记忆和认知速度的测量指标相关。所有相关性均具有统计学意义。将所有测试纳入回归方程时,多重相关系数为0.63。患有DSM-IV痴呆症的受试者和仅符合标准A(多种认知缺陷)的受试者的平均fNART得分低于既不符合这两组标准的受试者。然而,前两组中的受试者比未患痴呆症组中的受试者年龄更大,且受教育程度显著更低。在协方差分析中控制这两个因素时,组间差异的幅度虽然总体上仍然显著,但大幅降低。当使用认知状态的心理测量指标——简易精神状态检查表(MMSE)和PAS认知损害量表——代替诊断类别时,也得到了类似的结果模式。控制年龄和教育因素后,fNART与MMSE和PAS认知损害量表的偏相关分别为0.25(P < 0.01)和 -0.33(P < 0.01)。fNART得分在性别之间没有差异,也与PAS抑郁、中风或行为变化量表没有显著相关性。fNART与PAS上基于 informant 评估的认知衰退之间存在小但显著的相关性。
讨论
本研究在一个大概率的老年母语者样本中证明了国家成人阅读测试法语改编版具有出色的测量特性,并提供了首个大样本证据来支持fNART作为一种对痴呆症状态相对稳健的智力功能测试的有效性。伪猜测参数的值可以忽略不计,这表明选择发音不易猜测的单词这一目标已经实现。平均项目可区分性很高,所使用的单词涵盖了能力范围。认知表现和受教育程度与fNART得分之间存在显著关系,这一发现对于验证该测试作为病前认知能力的测量方法很重要。fNART与基于 informant 的认知衰退评估和年龄的低相关性支持了fNART对能力衰退相对稳健的观点。在这个法语改编版中观察到的关系与针对英语工具报告的关系相当。然而,符合DSM-IV痴呆症标准或仅符合标准A的受试者得分低于其他受试者。已经观察到NART得分会随着痴呆症而下降,特别是在中度和重度病例中。鉴于fNART的机制与NART相同,可以预期,虽然它通常对当前的痴呆症状态具有稳健性,但随着疾病的进展,表现会出现一些下降。fNART与PAS量表之间的关系与Jorm等人在一个英语样本中报告的PAS与NART之间的关系非常相似。尽管fNART与PAS认知衰退量表之间的相关性很小,但如果该测量在面对智力衰退时真的稳定,预计这种相关性不会显著。然而,这种相关性在原始英语工具中也有体现,可能反映了智力能力较低者患痴呆症的风险更高。
结论
需要进一步研究以提高该量表相对于WAIS-R校准的精度。尽管如此,本研究已经证明fNART是评估说法语者病前智力能力的一种可靠且有效的方法。