Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring (Dec 2019)

Normative data from linear and nonlinear quantile regression in CANTAB: Cognition in mid‐to‐late life in an epidemiological sample

  • Rosemary A. Abbott,
  • Caroline Skirrow,
  • Martha Jokisch,
  • Maarten Timmers,
  • Johannes Streffer,
  • Luc vanNueten,
  • Michael Krams,
  • Angela Winkler,
  • Noreen Pundt,
  • Pradeep J. Nathan,
  • Philippa Rock,
  • Francesca K. Cormack,
  • Christian Weimar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dadm.2018.10.007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 36 – 44

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction Normative cognitive data can help to distinguish pathological decline from normal aging. This study presents normative data from the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery, using linear regression and nonlinear quantile regression approaches. Methods Heinz Nixdorf Recall study participants completed Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery tests: paired‐associate learning, spatial working memory, and reaction time. Data were available for 1349‐1529 healthy adults aged 57‐84 years. Linear and nonlinear quantile regression analyses examined age‐related changes, adjusting for sex and education. Quantile regression differentiated seven performance bands (percentiles: 97.7, 93.3, 84.1, 50, 15.9, 6.7, and 2.3). Results Normative data show age‐related cognitive decline across all tests, but with quantile regression revealing heterogeneous trajectories of cognitive aging, particularly for the test of episodic memory function (paired‐associate learning). Discussion This study presents normative data from Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery in mid‐to‐late life. Quantile regression can model heterogeneity in age‐related cognitive trajectories as seen in the paired‐associate learning episodic memory measure.

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