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NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL TEST PERFORMANCE IN FRAMINGHAM: A DESCRIPTIVE STUDY
74
Citations
10
References
1987
Year
NeuropsychologyPsychopathologyNeuropsychological Test PerformanceCognitive RehabilitationPsychologySocial SciencesGeriatric NeurologyNeuropsychologic TestsLanguage TestingCognitive DevelopmentFramingham StudyAphasiaPsychological EvaluationNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive SciencePsychiatryTest DevelopmentCognitive VariableRehabilitationCognitive FunctionCognitive PerformanceCognitive DysfunctionMemory AssessmentCommunicative DisordersMedicinePsychological Measurement
In 1976–1978, a battery of eight neuropsychologic tests was administered to 2,123 participants in the Framingham Study aged 55 to 89 yr. The battery was designed to sample multiple areas of cognitive function including language skills, memory, learning, reproduction of designs, attention, and abstract thinking. Performance is described for several groups in this population: a large community-dwelling sample, those with hearing impairments, and those with documented strokes. Performance is described by age, sex, and education strata for the community sample. This normative information should be useful for interpreting individual test performance on neuropsychological tests.
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