2016
DOI: 10.1080/13803395.2016.1252725
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Latent structure of cognitive performance in the adult children study

Abstract: Objective The Adult Children Study (ACS) at the Knight Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center is a longitudinal investigation designed to identify and validate potential biomarkers of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in cognitively normal individuals with and without a family history of AD. The purpose of the current study was to validate the proposed latent structure of the ACS psychometric battery. Method Confirmatory factor analyses of baseline data in a sample of 229 (75 men) cognitively normal middle-a… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2

Citation Types

0
2
0

Year Published

2019
2019
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
4

Relationship

0
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
references
References 57 publications
(78 reference statements)
0
2
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Two-sided Grubb’s tests did not identify any statistically significant outlier in group mean age distribution for first-degree relatives ( G = 3.07, p = 0.428) or controls ( G = 3.52, p = 0.079). As indicated in Table S3, only 4 studies (Berti et al, 2011 ; Head et al, 2017 ; Jonaitis et al, 2015 ; Rice et al, 2003 ) documented the exact age ranges for first-degree relatives and controls. Out of 34, 13 (38.24%) studies (Abulafia et al, 2017 , 2019a , b ; Fleisher et al, 2005 ; Green & Levey, 1999 ; Johnson et al, 2006 , 2018 ; La Rue et al, 2008 ; Mason et al, 2017 ; Rajah et al, 2017 ; Ravona-Springer et al, 2020 ; Sanchez et al, 2017 ; Sanchez-Benavides et al, 2016 ) included only middle-aged individuals (40–65 years), 12 (35.29%) studies (Aschenbrenner et al, 2016 ; Bassett et al, 2006 ; Berti et al, 2011 ; Debette et al, 2009 ; Fladby et al, 2017 ; Hazlett et al, 2015 ; Head et al, 2017 ; La Rue et al, 1996 ; Miller et al, 2005 ; Rice et al, 2003 ; Smith et al, 2010 ; Yassa et al, 2008 ) intermixed middle-aged and older (> 65 years) adults, four (11.76%) studies (Donix et al, 2010 ; Jonaitis et al, 2015 ; Mosconi et al, 2011 , 2012 ) intermixed young (< 40 years), middle-aged, and older participants, one (2.94%) study intermixed young and middle-aged individuals (Del Cerro et al, 2020 ), and four (11.76%) studies (Bendlin et al, 2010 ; La Rue et al, 1995 ; Smith et al, 2002 , 2005 ) did not provide sufficient information (no age ranges specified) to ascertain the probable age category of the participants (see Table S3 notes for details).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Two-sided Grubb’s tests did not identify any statistically significant outlier in group mean age distribution for first-degree relatives ( G = 3.07, p = 0.428) or controls ( G = 3.52, p = 0.079). As indicated in Table S3, only 4 studies (Berti et al, 2011 ; Head et al, 2017 ; Jonaitis et al, 2015 ; Rice et al, 2003 ) documented the exact age ranges for first-degree relatives and controls. Out of 34, 13 (38.24%) studies (Abulafia et al, 2017 , 2019a , b ; Fleisher et al, 2005 ; Green & Levey, 1999 ; Johnson et al, 2006 , 2018 ; La Rue et al, 2008 ; Mason et al, 2017 ; Rajah et al, 2017 ; Ravona-Springer et al, 2020 ; Sanchez et al, 2017 ; Sanchez-Benavides et al, 2016 ) included only middle-aged individuals (40–65 years), 12 (35.29%) studies (Aschenbrenner et al, 2016 ; Bassett et al, 2006 ; Berti et al, 2011 ; Debette et al, 2009 ; Fladby et al, 2017 ; Hazlett et al, 2015 ; Head et al, 2017 ; La Rue et al, 1996 ; Miller et al, 2005 ; Rice et al, 2003 ; Smith et al, 2010 ; Yassa et al, 2008 ) intermixed middle-aged and older (> 65 years) adults, four (11.76%) studies (Donix et al, 2010 ; Jonaitis et al, 2015 ; Mosconi et al, 2011 , 2012 ) intermixed young (< 40 years), middle-aged, and older participants, one (2.94%) study intermixed young and middle-aged individuals (Del Cerro et al, 2020 ), and four (11.76%) studies (Bendlin et al, 2010 ; La Rue et al, 1995 ; Smith et al, 2002 , 2005 ) did not provide sufficient information (no age ranges specified) to ascertain the probable age category of the participants (see Table S3 notes for details).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The systematic review yielded 26 cross-sectional (Abulafia et al, 2017 , 2019a , b ; Aschenbrenner et al, 2016 ; Bassett et al, 2006 ; Bendlin et al, 2010 ; Berti et al, 2011 ; Del Cerro et al, 2020 ; Donix et al, 2010 ; Fladby et al, 2017 ; Fleisher et al, 2005 ; Hazlett et al, 2015 ; Head et al, 2017 ; Johnson et al, 2006 ; La Rue et al, 1995 , 1996 , 2008 ; Mason et al, 2017 ; Mosconi et al, 2011 ; Rajah et al, 2017 ; Ravona-Springer et al, 2020 ; Rice et al, 2003 ; Sanchez et al, 2017 ; Smith et al, 2002 , 2010 ; Yassa et al, 2008 ), two case–control (Green & Levey, 1999 ; Mosconi et al, 2012 ), and six prospective cohort (Debette et al, 2009 ; Johnson et al, 2018 ; Jonaitis et al, 2015 ; Miller et al, 2005 ; Sanchez-Benavides et al, 2016 ; Smith et al, 2005 ) studies. In the Supplementary Online Content, Tables S5, S6, and S7 summarize the results regarding the assessment of risk of bias for each included study according to the respective research design.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%