The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students

The Boston Naming Test (BNT) is a popular cognitive test designed to detect word-finding difficulties in neurologic disease. However, numerous studies have demonstrated the BNT’s inherent cultural bias and cautioned against uncritical administration outside of North America. There is little research...

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Main Authors: Kevin G.F. Thomas, Lauren Baerecke, Chen Y. Pan, Helen L. Ferrett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2019-11-01
Series:African Journal of Psychological Assessment
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/15
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spelling doaj-9b07707d950146ec805ece4e292f59e72020-11-25T02:53:01ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Psychological Assessment2707-16182617-27982019-11-0110e1e1010.4102/ajopa.v1i0.157The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university studentsKevin G.F. Thomas0Lauren Baerecke1Chen Y. Pan2Helen L. Ferrett3Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, University of Cape Town, Cape TownDepartment of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, University of Cape Town, Cape TownDepartment of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, University of Cape Town, Cape TownDepartment of Psychiatry, Faculty of Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, StellenboschThe Boston Naming Test (BNT) is a popular cognitive test designed to detect word-finding difficulties in neurologic disease. However, numerous studies have demonstrated the BNT’s inherent cultural bias and cautioned against uncritical administration outside of North America. There is little research on the BNT performance of South African samples and on ways to make the test culturally fair for use in this country. In this article, we describe the development and psychometric properties of the BNT-South African Short Form (BNT-SASF). This instrument includes 15 items drawn from the original test pool and judged by a panel of practising neuropsychologists and community members to be culturally appropriate for use in South Africa. We administered the standard 60-item BNT and the BNT-SASF to a homogeneous (English-fluent, high socioeconomic status and highly educated) sample of young South African adults. This design allowed us to avoid potentially confounding sociodemographic influences in our evaluation of the instrument’s basic utility. We found that the BNT-SASF demonstrates fundamental psychometric properties that are the equivalent of short forms developed elsewhere. Moreover, it appears to measure the same construct as the 60-item BNT while being less culturally biased. We conclude that the BNT-SASF has potential utility in South African assessment settings. It is quick and easy to administer, thus aiding in the rapid screening of patients. Moreover, it is cost-effective because its items are drawn from the pool comprising the original test. Future research will describe psychometric properties of Afrikaans and isiXhosa versions of the BNT-SASF and investigate diagnostic validity in dementia patients.https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/15boston naming testcross-cultural neuropsychologycultural biasreliabilityshort formvalidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kevin G.F. Thomas
Lauren Baerecke
Chen Y. Pan
Helen L. Ferrett
spellingShingle Kevin G.F. Thomas
Lauren Baerecke
Chen Y. Pan
Helen L. Ferrett
The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students
African Journal of Psychological Assessment
boston naming test
cross-cultural neuropsychology
cultural bias
reliability
short form
validity
author_facet Kevin G.F. Thomas
Lauren Baerecke
Chen Y. Pan
Helen L. Ferrett
author_sort Kevin G.F. Thomas
title The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students
title_short The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students
title_full The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students
title_fullStr The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students
title_full_unstemmed The Boston Naming Test-South African Short Form, Part I: Psychometric properties in a group of healthy English-speaking university students
title_sort boston naming test-south african short form, part i: psychometric properties in a group of healthy english-speaking university students
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Psychological Assessment
issn 2707-1618
2617-2798
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The Boston Naming Test (BNT) is a popular cognitive test designed to detect word-finding difficulties in neurologic disease. However, numerous studies have demonstrated the BNT’s inherent cultural bias and cautioned against uncritical administration outside of North America. There is little research on the BNT performance of South African samples and on ways to make the test culturally fair for use in this country. In this article, we describe the development and psychometric properties of the BNT-South African Short Form (BNT-SASF). This instrument includes 15 items drawn from the original test pool and judged by a panel of practising neuropsychologists and community members to be culturally appropriate for use in South Africa. We administered the standard 60-item BNT and the BNT-SASF to a homogeneous (English-fluent, high socioeconomic status and highly educated) sample of young South African adults. This design allowed us to avoid potentially confounding sociodemographic influences in our evaluation of the instrument’s basic utility. We found that the BNT-SASF demonstrates fundamental psychometric properties that are the equivalent of short forms developed elsewhere. Moreover, it appears to measure the same construct as the 60-item BNT while being less culturally biased. We conclude that the BNT-SASF has potential utility in South African assessment settings. It is quick and easy to administer, thus aiding in the rapid screening of patients. Moreover, it is cost-effective because its items are drawn from the pool comprising the original test. Future research will describe psychometric properties of Afrikaans and isiXhosa versions of the BNT-SASF and investigate diagnostic validity in dementia patients.
topic boston naming test
cross-cultural neuropsychology
cultural bias
reliability
short form
validity
url https://ajopa.org/index.php/ajopa/article/view/15
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