Test Review of the Pediatric Performance Validity Test Suite (PdPVTS)

Author(s):  
Draycen DeCator ◽  
Michael Wolff ◽  
Jesse J. Piehl
Author(s):  
Sarah Ellen Braun ◽  
Stephanie Fountain-Zaragoza ◽  
Colleen A. Halliday ◽  
Michael David Horner

2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 285-297
Author(s):  
Anselm B. M. Fuermaier ◽  
Oliver Tucha ◽  
Dorothea Russ ◽  
Johanna K. Ehrenstein ◽  
Martin Stanke ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 1022-1022
Author(s):  
Abramson D ◽  
White D ◽  
Resch Z ◽  
Ovsiew G ◽  
Soble J

Abstract Objective The Boston Naming Test (BNT) has recently been proposed as an embedded performance validity test (PVT) with high specificity/low sensitivity; however, this has not been replicated. This study therefore aimed to cross-validate findings in a mixed clinical neuropsychiatric sample. Method This cross-sectional study of 136 primary monolingual English-speaking patients who completed the BNT during outpatient evaluation was 57% female/43% male, 38% Caucasian, 39% African American, 16% Hispanic, and 6% Asian with mean age of 47.7 years (SD = 16.6) and mean education of 14.0 years (SD = 2.7). In total, 109/136 (80%) were classified as valid and 27/136 (20%) as invalid based on 4 independent criterion PVTs. Results Respective mean BNT raw/T-scores were 49.5 (SD = 9.2)/45.3 (SD = 10.9) for the valid group and 45.8 (SD = 8.2)/41.1 (SD = 7.8) for the invalid group. Analyses of variance fell just above significance for both BNT raw F(1, 134) = 3.75, p = .05 and T-scores F(1, 134) = 3.55, p = .06. Receiver operator characteristic curve analysis for the raw score was significant, with an area under the curve (AUC) of .67 (p < .01) and an optimal cutoff of ≤ 35 (4% specificity/90% sensitivity). BNT raw scores remained significant after removing bilingual participants, (AUC = .68; p < .01), with identical psychometric properties. In contrast, analysis of BNT T-scores (AUC = .61; p = .08) were nonsignificant. Conclusions Overall, results showed that the BNT cannot psychometrically distinguish valid versus invalid performance and therefore has questionable utility as a PVT in a mixed clinical setting. Findings contribute to a growing literature base cautioning against the indiscriminate use of measures of actual cognitive ability as validity indicators, particularly in populations with cognitive impairment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 303-315
Author(s):  
John W. Lace ◽  
Alexandra F. Grant ◽  
Karen M. Kosky ◽  
Carson L. Teague ◽  
Kimberly T. Lowell ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 1014-1014
Author(s):  
Schroeder R ◽  
Clark H ◽  
Martin P

Abstract Objective Eglit and colleagues (2019) found that the sum of the four age-corrected scaled scores from the Color Word Interference Test (CWIT) of the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System (D-KEFS) could act as a useful embedded performance validity test (PVT). As such, we attempted to cross-validate their findings. Method Patients included 312 individuals who completed neuropsychological evaluations. Individuals were excluded if they were not administered CWIT, were not administered at least 4 criterion PVTs, had diagnoses of dementia or intellectual disability, or had indeterminate validity results (i.e., failure of one PVT). Valid performers (n = 231) were those who passed all criterion PVTs while invalid performers (n = 81) failed two or more criterion PVTs. A receiver operating characteristic curve was conducted for the CWIT embedded PVT. Results Area under the curve (AUC) was .804. At a cutoff of < 26, specificity was 90% and sensitivity was 48%. At a cutoff of < 20 (the first cutoff at which 90% specificity was found by Eglit et al.), specificity was 95% and sensitivity was 32%. At an even more conservative cutoff of < 18 (the cutoff recommended by Eglit et al.), specificity was 96% and sensitivity was 22%. Conclusions These results cross-validate Eglit et al.’s findings, indicating that the sum of age-corrected scaled scores across the four CWIT trials can effectively serve as an embedded PVT. A more liberal cutoff was able to be applied in our sample but, even at conservative cutoffs documented in Eglit et al., sensitivity rates were adequate enough to warrant use of the index as an embedded PVT.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 1161-1161
Author(s):  
Sarah Saravia ◽  
Daniel W Lopez-Hernandez ◽  
Abril J Baez ◽  
Isabel Muñoz ◽  
Winter Olmos ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective The Dot Counting Test (DCT) is a performance validity test. McCaul et al. (2018) recently revised the DCT cut-off score from ≥17 to 13.80; we evaluated the new cut-off in non-Latinx Caucasian and Caucasian Latinx traumatic brain injury (TBI) survivors and healthy comparison (HC) participants. Method The sample consisted of 37 acute TBI (ATBI; 11 Caucasian Latinx; 26 non-Latinx Caucasian), 27 chronic TBI (CTBI; 10 Caucasian Latinx; 17 non-Latinx Caucasian), and 55 HC (29 Caucasian Latinx; 26 non-Latinx Caucasian) participants. Results An ANCOVA, controlling for age, revealed no DCT E-scores differences between groups. Both the conventional and the new cut-off scores had different failure rates in ATBI (conventional cut-off: 0%; PNC: 16%), CTBI (conventional cut-off: 7%; PNC: 15%), and HC (conventional cut-off: 10%; PNC: 11%) participants. For the Caucasian Latinx group (conventional cut-off: 6%; PNC: 12%) and the non-Latinx Caucasian group (conventional cut-off: 6%; PNC: 14%), demonstrated different failure rates across cut-off scores. Group differences were found with the McCaul et al. (2018) cut-off and the conventional cut-off. Also, chi-squared analysis revealed non-Latinx Caucasian participants with ATBI had greater failure rates than Caucasian Latinx participants with ATBI. Conclusion The new DCT cut-off score resulted in greater failure rates in TBI survivors. Also, this effect appears to be most pronounced in non-Latinx Caucasian persons with ATBI. Future work should investigate possible reasons for these differences so that more stringent DCT can be utilized in a way that provides less biased results for brain injury survivors across racial and ethnic groups.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document