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NORMS FOR SPANISH SPEAKERS

Demographically-adjusted norms for the Grooved Pegboard and Finger Tapping tests in Spanish-speaking adults: Results from the Neuropsychological Norms for the U.S.-Mexico Border Region in Spanish (NP-NUMBRS) Project

, , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 396-418 | Received 15 Jun 2019, Accepted 03 Jan 2020, Published online: 20 Feb 2020
 

Abstract

Objective

We developed demographically-corrected norms for Spanish-speakers from the U.S.-Mexico border regions of California and Arizona on two tests of motor skills - the Grooved Pegboard Test (Pegboard) and Finger Tapping Test (Tapping) - as part of a larger normative effort.

Method

Participants were native Spanish-speakers from the Neuropsychological Norms for the U.S.-Mexico Border Region in Spanish (NP-NUMBRS) Project (Pegboard: N = 254; Tapping: N = 183; age: 19–60 years; education: 0–20 years; 59% women). We examined the association of demographics (age, education and gender) with raw scores. Raw test scores were then converted to demographically-corrected T-scores via fractional polynomial equations. We also examined rates of impairment (T-score < 40) based on the current norms and on previously published norms for English-speaking non-Hispanic Whites and Blacks.

Results

Having more years of education was associated with better raw test score performance on both tests (p < .001), and increased age was associated with worse performance on Pegboard (p < .001). Men outperformed women on Tapping, and older age was associated with lower raw scores in men only on the Tapping non-dominant hand trial (p = .02). The normed T-scores were confirmed to be normally distributed and free from demographic influences, and resulted in expected rates of impairment. Applying existing norms for English-speaking non-Hispanic Whites and Blacks to the raw scores of Spanish-speakers generally yielded lower than expected impairment rates (2–13%), with one exception: non-dominant Pegboard, for which non-Hispanic White norms overestimated impairment (23%).

Conclusions

Present findings underscore the importance of appropriate, population-specific normative data, even for tests of motor ability.

Disclosure statement

All authors attest that there are no conflicts of interest with this work.

Additional information

Funding

This manuscript was supported by NIH grants P30MH62512, R01MH064907, K23MH105297, P30AG059299, the UCSD Hispanic Center of Excellence and T32 MH019934.

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