Performance of Brain-Injured versus Non-Brain-Injured Individuals on Three Versions of the Category Test - Page 120 - UNT Digital Library
Por um escritor misterioso
Descrição
To date, no research exists examining criterion-related validity of alternate, computerized forms of the Category Test. The intent of this study was to address criterion-related validity of three full forms of the Category Test. In that, the goal was to examine equivalency of each version in their ability to differentiate brain-injured from non-brain-injured individuals. Forty-nine (N = 49) healthy adults and 45 (N = 45) brain-injured adults were tested using three versions of the Category Test, the BDI, and the WAIS-R NI. ANOVA indicated no significant differences between versions of the Category Test or an interaction between Category Test version and group membership on the total error score. MANOVA performed between versions of the Category Test and Subtest error scores indicated significant differences between versions on Subtest 3 and Subtest 6. Group membership (brain-injured v. non-brain-injured) produced a significant main effect on all subtests of the Category Test except Subtest 2. Several exploratory analyses were performed examining the relationship between neuropsychological impairment, group membership based on Category Test error scores, and the WAIS-R NI. Clinical applications, such as the use of serial testing to index neurorehabilitation gains, were discussed.
Full article: PEER-REVIEWED ABSTRACTS
PDF) BibAph Annotated Bibliography Complete Book December 2020
PDF) A Fetal Brain magnetic resonance Acquisition Numerical
A Self-Deleting AAV-CRISPR System for In Vivo Genome Editing
PDF) Intraventricular Hemorrhage and White Matter Injury in
Propeller Education Kit Labs Datasheet by Parallax Inc.
4.8 End-of-Chapter Exercises - savingstudentsmoney.org
Pharmaceutics Announcements
UTRGV School of Medicine, Research Symposium 2019 by UTRGV
de
por adulto (o preço varia de acordo com o tamanho do grupo)