Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Clinical and Health Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2021;82(1):59-70. doi: 10.3233/JAD-201249.
Relative to the abundance of publications on dementia and clock drawing, there is limited literature operationalizing 'normal' clock production.
To operationalize subtle behavioral patterns seen in normal digital clock drawing to command and copy conditions.
From two research cohorts of cognitively-well participants age 55 plus who completed digital clock drawing to command and copy conditions (n = 430), we examined variables operationalizing clock face construction, digit placement, clock hand construction, and a variety of time-based, latency measures. Data are stratified by age, education, handedness, and number anchoring.
Normative data are provided in supplementary tables. Typical errors reported in clock research with dementia were largely absent. Adults age 55 plus produce symmetric clock faces with one stroke, with minimal overshoot and digit misplacement, and hands with expected hour hand to minute hand ratio. Data suggest digitally acquired graphomotor and latency differences based on handedness, age, education, and anchoring.
Data provide useful benchmarks from which to assess digital clock drawing performance in Alzheimer's disease and related dementias.
与痴呆症和时钟绘画相关的文献丰富相比,用于操作“正常”时钟绘制的文献有限。
将正常数字时钟绘制的命令和复制条件下的细微行为模式操作化。
我们从两个认知正常的参与者年龄在 55 岁以上的研究队列中,他们完成了数字时钟的命令和复制条件(n=430),检查了操作化时钟面构造、数字放置、时钟指针构造以及各种基于时间的延迟测量的变量。数据按年龄、教育、惯用手和数字锚定进行分层。
补充表中提供了规范数据。在痴呆症时钟研究中报告的典型错误基本不存在。55 岁以上的成年人用一笔画出对称的时钟面,超调量和数字错位最小,并且指针具有预期的时针到分针的比例。数据表明,基于惯用手、年龄、教育和锚定,数字化获得的笔迹和延迟存在差异。
数据提供了有用的基准,可用于评估阿尔茨海默病和相关痴呆症的数字时钟绘制表现。