TY - JOUR
T1 - Applying Psycholinguistic Evidence to the Construction of a New Test of Verbal Memory in Late-Life Cognitive Decline
T2 - The Auditory Wordlist Learning Test
AU - Hessler, Johannes Baltasar
AU - Brieber, David
AU - Egle, Johanna
AU - Mandler, Georg
AU - Jahn, Thomas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2017.
PY - 2019/6/1
Y1 - 2019/6/1
N2 - The construction of the German Auditory Wordlist Learning Test (AWLT) for the assessment of verbal memory in late-life cognitive decline was guided by psycholinguistic evidence, which indicates that a word’s linguistic characteristics influence its probability of being learned and recalled. The AWLT includes four trials of learning, short and long delayed free recall, and a recognition task. Its words were selected with taking into account their semantic content, orthographic length, frequency in the language, and orthographic neighborhood size (the number of words derived by adding, subtracting, or replacing a single letter at a time). Through this method, it was possible to better control item and test difficulty, improve the similarity between parallel forms, and reduce bias through recall advantages for certain words due to their linguistic characteristics. In two pilot studies with cognitively healthy subjects, the AWLT showed good internal consistency, split-half reliability, and parallel forms reliability and proved able to assess learning, retention, and recognition. Overall, linguistic recall effects were mitigated; however, an advantage for high-frequency words was observed.
AB - The construction of the German Auditory Wordlist Learning Test (AWLT) for the assessment of verbal memory in late-life cognitive decline was guided by psycholinguistic evidence, which indicates that a word’s linguistic characteristics influence its probability of being learned and recalled. The AWLT includes four trials of learning, short and long delayed free recall, and a recognition task. Its words were selected with taking into account their semantic content, orthographic length, frequency in the language, and orthographic neighborhood size (the number of words derived by adding, subtracting, or replacing a single letter at a time). Through this method, it was possible to better control item and test difficulty, improve the similarity between parallel forms, and reduce bias through recall advantages for certain words due to their linguistic characteristics. In two pilot studies with cognitively healthy subjects, the AWLT showed good internal consistency, split-half reliability, and parallel forms reliability and proved able to assess learning, retention, and recognition. Overall, linguistic recall effects were mitigated; however, an advantage for high-frequency words was observed.
KW - frequency
KW - linguistics
KW - neighborhood size
KW - verbal memory
KW - word length
KW - wordlist
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85041370806&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1073191117690603
DO - 10.1177/1073191117690603
M3 - Article
C2 - 28164725
AN - SCOPUS:85041370806
SN - 1073-1911
VL - 26
SP - 743
EP - 755
JO - Assessment
JF - Assessment
IS - 4
ER -