Publication | Closed Access
The Letter Digit Substitution Test: Normative Data for 1,858 Healthy Participants Aged 24–81 from the Maastricht Aging Study (MAAS): Influence of Age, Education, and Sex
387
Citations
19
References
2006
Year
AgingAgeismCognitionEpidemiology Of AgingSocial SciencesPsychologyHealthy ParticipantsMaastricht Aging StudyHealthy AgingPhysical AgingAging-associated DiseaseOther Substitution TestsPublic HealthPsychological EvaluationCognitive ScienceGeriatricsTest DevelopmentProductive AgingCognitive VariableGlobal AgingNormative DataExperimental PsychologyLifespan AgingLdst PerformanceMedicineAging ProcessOral Versions
The Letter Digit Substitution Test (LDST) is based on earlier developed substitution tests (e.g., Digit Symbol Substitution Test) but uses over-learned signs instead of the symbols used in other substitution tests. The written and oral versions of the LDST were administered to a large, cognitively screened sample (N = 1,858) of adults aged 24 to 81 years. Age was the most important predictor of LDST performance, and females outperformed males. A low level of education profoundly influenced LDST performance: the effect of a low versus high level of education on LDST performance was comparable to about 20 years of aging. Regression-based normative data were prepared for both the written and oral versions of the LDST.
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