| Literature DB >> 29342927 |
Jessica A Price1, Zoe A Morris2, Shane Costello3.
Abstract
Adaptive behaviour has been viewed broadly as an individual's ability to meet the standards of social responsibilities and independence; however, this definition has been a source of debate amongst researchers and clinicians. Based on the rich history and the importance of the construct of adaptive behaviour, the current study aimed to provide a comprehensive overview of the application of adaptive behaviour models to assessment tools, through a systematic review. A plethora of assessment measures for adaptive behaviour have been developed in order to adequately assess the construct; however, it appears that the only definition on which authors seem to agree is that adaptive behaviour is what adaptive behaviour scales measure. The importance of the construct for diagnosis, intervention and planning has been highlighted throughout the literature. It is recommended that researchers and clinicians critically review what measures of adaptive behaviour they are utilising and it is suggested that the definition and theory is revisited.Entities:
Keywords: ABAS; Vineland; adaptive behaviour; adaptive behaviour assessment; adaptive behaviour construct; systematic review
Year: 2018 PMID: 29342927 PMCID: PMC5791029 DOI: 10.3390/bs8010011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Syntax used in the systematic literature search for PsychINFO.
| Keywords | Combined With |
|---|---|
| Adapt † behav † | + model † |
| + theor † | |
| + structure | |
| Adapt † function † | + model † |
| + theor † | |
| + structure | |
| Model † | + personal independence |
| + social responsibilit † | |
| + conceptual skill † | |
| + social skill † AND adapt † behav † | |
| + practical skill † AND adapt † behav † | |
Note: †= truncation of the word (a technique that broadens the search to include various word endings and spellings); + = and.
Review protocol.
| Filter Type | Descriptions and Guidelines | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inclusion Criteria | |||
| Keyword Search | Search selected databases with the keywords defined in | PsychINFO | HPI and MMYTP |
| Initial hits: | 3061 | 913 | |
| Deduction Process | Duplicate articles Articles written in another language Books Animal (i.e., rats) or artificial intelligence studies Obvious irrelevance to current topic | ||
| Reduced sample: | 194 | 90 | |
| Reduced sample: | - | 50 | |
| Reduced sample: | 87 | 20 | |
| Content Analysis | Ensure relevance of content by requiring that the selected articles meet the criteria for inclusion (all articles read in full to examine their content and relevance) | ||
| Reduced sample: | 21 | 11 | |
| Consolidation of initial and secondary search | |||
Summary characteristics of included studies.
| Author(s) | Year | Location | Sample | Target Population | Purpose | Design | Adaptive Behaviour Tool |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allen-Meares, P., & Lane, B. A. [ | 1983 | United States | N/A | Special Education | Review of assessment tools for implications of practice for social workers | Review article | Adaptive Behaviour Inventory for Children (ABIC); Children’s Adaptive Behaviour Scale (CABS) |
| Arias, B., Verdugo, M. A., Navas, P., & Gomez, L. E. [ | 2013 | Spain | Children with ( | Provide support to a multidimensional structure of conceptual, social and practical skills compared to a ‘ | Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA). The first steps were model specification and justification. Model fit was evaluated using a combination of absolute and incremental goodness of fit indices | Diagnostic Adaptive Behaviour Scale (DABS) | |
| Aricak, O. T., & Oakland, T. [ | 2009 | Turkey | Representative of English-speaking U.S population as stratified by sex, race/ethnicity, and education levels consistent with the 1999 US census. Also included disorders proportionate to the population: ID, Asperger spectrum disorders, behaviour disorder, emotional disturbance, epilepsy, deaf and hard of hearing, speech impairment, and brain injury | To address the following four issues: whether (a) the skill areas in the ABAS-II-TRF, ages 5 to 21, display the same pattern of factor loadings, (b) the skill areas display the same factor loadings, (c) the intercepts of the observed skill areas are equal, and (d) the skill areas measure the corresponding factors with the same accuracy | Three two-group CFA were conducted to explore the factorial invariance of the ABAS-II-TRF. | Adaptive Behaviour Assessment System-II Teacher Form (ABAS-II-TRF) | |
| Bloom, A. S., & Zelko, F. A. J. [ | 1994 | Canada | Children with suspected developmental delay | To present data with respect to the variability in adaptive behaviour that may be expected in individuals who have varying degrees of intellectual delay | Chi-square comparisons and frequency comparisons | Developmental Profile II (DP-II) | |
| Carpentieri, S., & Morgan, S. B. [ | 1996 | United States | Children with ID or ASD | To examine the relationship between adaptive functioning, as assessed by the VABS, and intellectual functioning, as assessed by the Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scale (SB), in children with ASD or ID. Second, the study aimed to determine how well predictions regarding level of functioning could be made from one measure to another | VABS | ||
| Chiarello, L. A., Almasri, N., & Palisano, R. [ | 2009 | United States | Children with Cerebral Palsy (CP) | To describe the adaptive behaviour of children with CP and identify the child, family and service factors related to their adaptive behaviour | Descriptive analyses were computed for the children, family and service variables. | The Coping Inventory | |
| Childs, R. [ | 1982 | United States | Elementary students with ID | To examine the adaptive behaviour of educable children with ID and its relationship with the diagnosis of ID as a two-dimensional concept | A 2 × 3 × 3 × 2 factorial ANOVA design incorporated the independent variables of race, sex, IQ, and placement, using 0.01 level of significance. | ABIC | |
| Coster, W. J., Kramer, J. M., Tian, F., Dooley, M., Liljenquist, K., Kao, Y., & Ni, P. [ | 2015 | United States | Children with ASD | To evaluate the performance of the PEDI-CAT with a national sample of children and youth with ASD | The structure and unidimensionality of the domains were evaluated using CFA and CFI and TLI were used to determine indexes of fit. The RMSEA was also examined. | The Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory-Computer Adaptive Test (PEDI-CAT) | |
| Duvdevany, I. [ | 2002 | Israel | Study group—mild-moderate ID | To examine the effect of inclusion in the social activities of individuals with developmental disabilities in community centres in Israel on their perceived self-concept and their adaptive behaviour | Bivariate correlations among the self-control factors | ABS-Residential and Community 2nd edition | |
| Fisher, M. H., Lense, M. D., & Dykens, E. M. [ | 2016 | United States | Individuals with William’s Syndrome | To examine longitudinal profiles of cognitive and adaptive functioning in adolescents and adults with WS | A series of two-level mixed models were used to assess changes in KBIT-2 and VABS-II scores over time. | Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scale, 2nd Edition (VABS-II) | |
| Fombonne, E., Siddons, F., Achard, S., Frith, U., & Happe, F. [ | 1994 | United Kingdom | Children and adolescences with ASD | To explore the relationship between social cognition and everyday adaption in a French sample | Bivariate analyses and covariance analyses were used to statistically analyse the data | VABS | |
| Freeman, B. J., Del’Homme, M., Guthrie, D., & Zhang, F. [ | 1999 | United States | Children with ASD | To examine how VABS scores in individuals with ASD change as a function of age utilising human growth modelling statistical technique | Mixed linear model (MLM) including both fixed and random components (e.g., fixed component—ANOVA; random component—random error) | VABS | |
| Gillham, J. E., Carter, A. S., Volkmar, F. R., & Sparrow S. S. [ | 2000 | United States | Children with either ASD, PDDNOS, or developmental disorder (mild-moderate ID | To investigate the ability of the VABS to identify children with ASD | ANOVAs were conducted to determine whether there were significant differences between the three groups on IQ, mental age (MA) and VABS scores. | VABS | |
| Goodman, S. H., Sewell, D. R., Cooley, E. L., & Leavitt, N. [ | 1993 | United States | Study sample—receiving outpatient treatment or had been hospitalized within the previous six months for either schizophrenia or severe depression | To describe the RFS and provide reliability and validity data on one sample | Statistical analysis conducted for reliability (interitem reliability, test-retest reliability, and interrater reliability) and validity (criterion-group validity, and construct validity) | Role Functioning Scale (RFS) | |
| Green, S, A., & Carter, A. S. [ | 2014 | United States | Toddlers with ASD | To examine the development of daily living skills across 3 years in young children with ASD | Predictors of initial levels and trajectory of Daily Living Skills were examined by conducting a multilevel growth model analysis using hierarchical linear modelling (HLM). | VABS | |
| Hogan, A. E., Scott, K. G., & Bauer, C. R. [ | 1992 | United States | Mothers of | Premature birth, with absence of severe health or neurological problems | The construction of a scale that was undertaken as an ancillary study to the larger Infant Health and Development Program (IHDP) 1990 | Initial Scale Development—previously developed instruments were examined | Adaptive Social Behavior Inventory (ASBI) |
| Huberty, T. J. [ | 1986 | United States | Individuals referred for evaluation of learning or behaviour problems | To determine (1) the degree of relationship among the WISC-R and ABS-E factors and (2) whether the WISC-R deviation quotients (DQs) would be more accurate predictors of the ABS-SE scores than the IQ scores in an EMR sample | Separate stepwise regression analyses with maximum | ABS-SE | |
| Hunsucker, P. F., Nelson, R. O., & Clark, R. P. [ | 1986 | United States | South-eastern school system—generally scores average or slightly above national norms on group achievement and IQ tests | Aimed to (a) revise the AAMD (now AAIDD) ABS-Public School Version by reducing its length and simplifying its scoring; (b) obtain local norms for the modified scale; and (c) to evaluate the modified scale using the criteria of reliability and validity | Detailed statistical processes described including: test-retest reliability, concurrent validity with Walker Problem Behaviour Checklist, discriminant validity between typically developing individuals and special education groups | ABS-Public School Version | |
| Jenkinson, J. C. [ | 1996 | Australia | N/A | Individuals with ID | To explore some of the difficulties inherent in the use of psychometric concepts and measurements to identify ID from a needs perspective | Review paper | N/A (AAIDD definition of AB discussed) |
| Kane, H., & Oakland, T. D. [ | 2015 | United States | Archival data from the ABAS-II → | Normative data from the ABAS-II | To investigate the nature of adaptive behaviour in high- and low-ability groups, with the specific intent of identifying whether patterns of differentiation exist | After forming high- and low-adaptive groups, a series of exploratory factor analyses compared the relative importance of the constructs measured by the ABAS-II across each ability group | ABAS-II |
| Keith, T. Z, Fehrmann, P. G., Harrison, P. L., & Pottebaum, S. M. [ | 1987 | United States | Children selected that overlapped with the standardization of the VABS and the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children | To determine the nature of the relation between adaptive behaviour and intelligence | CFA was used to evaluate all three hypotheses within the study | VABS | |
| Liss, M., Harel, B., Fein, D., Allen, D., Dunn, M., Feinstein, C., Morris, R., Waterhouse, L., & Rapin, I. [ | 2001 | United States | Children with ASD, DLD and low IQ | To investigate the relationship between adaptive behaviour, IQ, ASD symptomatology, and other cognitive skills in both HAD and LAD children and controls matched on both age and nonverbal IQ | Multiple correlations were utilised to analyse relationships | VABS | |
| Navas, P., Verdugo, M. A., Arias, B., & Gomez, L. E. [ | 2012 | Spain | Children with ( | To present the develop of the AAIDD’s forthcoming DABS in Spain, specifically form 4–8 years old | The Partial Credit Model (PCM) was chosen to analyse items’ and persons’ functioning with the goal of selecting those items that will contribute to develop a short and precise measure of significant limitations in AB | DABS | |
| Oakland, T., & Algina, J. [ | 2011 | United States | The standardization sample of the ABAS-II—representative of the 2002 U.S census | To examine the factor structure of the ABAS-II parent/primary caregiver form for ages 0–5 years | Two-group CFA model were estimated using the robust maximum likelihood procedure (RMLP) | ABAS-II | |
| Oakland, T., Illiescu, D., Chen, H., & Chen, H. [ | 2013 | United States | All samples stratified by children’s age, gender, parent’s education level, and geographic region to be representative of each population | To examine possible similarities and differences in key psychometric qualities between the U.S-developed ABAS-II and its Romanian and Taiwanese adaptations | Reliability estimates were computed for the skill area and composite scores and then were compared across the three tests versions. Correlations between skill area and composite scores were computed and compared across the three versions to determine equivalence | ABAS-II | |
| Perozzi, J. A. [ | 1972 | United States | N/A | N/A | Review paper with the focus on the three aspects of adaptive behaviour identified by the AAMD (now AAIDD) | Review | N/A (AAIDD definition of AB discussed) |
| Schatz, J., & Hamdan-Allen, G. [ | 1995 | United States | ASD and ID | Examination of the impact of age and intelligence upon the pattern of adaptive skills in children with ASD compared to those with ID | Statistical analyses utilised: Chi-square goodness of fit Hierarchical multiple regression Bonferroni correction | VABS | |
| Seifer, R., Sameroff, A. J., & Jones, F. [ | 1981 | United States | Normative and High-risk population (high-risk = psychiatric diagnosis) | The present study had two functions: (1) to demonstrate that the RABI was an instrument which could yield maternal reports of specific areas of behavioural competence in preschool children; (2) to examine the difference in families with varying socioeconomic, racial, and psychiatric status | Interview of mothers using the RABI. | The Rochester Adaptive Behavior Inventory (RABI) | |
| Stinnett, T. A., Fuqua, D. R., & Coombs, W. T. [ | 1999 | United States | Children with and without ID | Examination of the construct validity of the ABS-S:2 through exploratory factor analyses | A series of factor analyses were performed on the correlation matrices reported in the ABS-S:2 manual | ABS-S:2 | |
| Tasse, M. J., Schalock, R. L., Balboni, G., Berasni, H., Borthwick-Duffy, S. A., Spreat, S., Thissen, D., Widamen, K. F., & Zhang, D. [ | 2012 | United States | N/A | N/A | Aims to update the current conceptualization, measurement, and use of the adaptive behaviour construct | Critical review | ABS-S:2 |
| Tasse, M. J., Schalock, R. L., Thissen, D., Balboni, G., Berasni, H., Borthwick-Duffy, S. A., Spreat, S., Widamen, K. F., Zhang, D., & Navas, P. [ | 2016 | United States | Representative U.S sample including race (73% Caucasian), ethnicity and known diagnoses | The development and standardization of the DABS | Detailed paper and statistical analysis on the development of the DABS within an American population and the standardization of the assessment tool | DABS | |
| Wolters, P. L., Brouwers, P., Moss, H. A., & Pizzo, P. A. [ | 1992 | United States | Children with symptomatic HIV infection | The purpose of this study was to characterize how HIV disease affects the everyday behavioural functioning of children in their home environment, and to determine the therapeutic effect of 6 months of zidovudine therapy on adaptive behaviour. | ANOVA with split-plot design and Greenhouse–Geisser correction were used to evaluate pre to posttreatment performance for all subjects combined as well as by various subgroups. | VABS |
Factors from adaptive behaviour assessment scales mapped across themes.
| Scales | Factors | Communication | Social | Practical | Conceptual | Miscellaneous |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RABI 1 | 6 | Family communication | Social behaviour with peers | Behaviour around the home | Content of play | Other Caretakers Miscellaneous Behaviours |
| ABIC 2 | 6 | - | Family | Non-academic school roles | - | - |
| ABS-S 3 | 5 | - | Social adjustment | Personal self-sufficiency | Personal-social responsibility | Community self-sufficiency |
| CABS 4 | 5 | Language development | Socialisation | Independent functioning | Family role performance | - |
| DP-II 5 | 5 | Communication | Social | Physical | - | - |
| PEDI-CAT 6 | 4 | - | Social/cognitive | Daily activities | Responsibility | - |
| RFS 7 | 4 | - | Immediate social network relationships | Working productivity | - | - |
| ABAS-II 8 | 3 | - | Social | Practical | Conceptual | - |
| ASBI 9 | 3 | Disrupt | Express | Comply | - | - |
| DABS 10 | 3 | - | Social | Practical | Conceptual | - |
| Vineland III 11 | 3 | Communication | Socialisation | Daily living skills | - | - |
| CI 12 | 2 | - | Environment | Self | - | - |
Note: Superscript denotes scale authors: 1 = Jones (1977); 2 = Mercer (1979); 3 = Lambert, Nihira & Leland (1993); 4 = Richmond & Kicklighter (1980); 5 = Alpern, Boll & Shearer (1980); 6 = Haley, Coster, Dumas, Fragala-Pinkham & Moed (1992); 7 = not reported; 8 = Harrison & Oakland (2003); 9 = Hogan, Scott & Bauer (1992); 10 = AAIDD; 11 = Sparrow, Cicchetti & Saulnier (2016); 12 = Zeitlin (1985).
Available psychometric properties for identified assessment scales.
| Scales | Age Range | Model-Fit and Reliability | Content Validity | Substantive Validity | Structural Validity | Generalizability | External Validity | Consequential Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RABI [ | 2–6 | Inter-rater reliability 0.84–0.99 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Intra-scale reliability 0.63 | ||||||||
| ABIC [ | 5–11 | Subtest reliability > 0.77 [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Split-half > 0.96 [ | ||||||||
| ABS-S [ | 3–18 | No composite score | Considered adequate [ | N/A | Considered adequate [ | N/A | N/A | Considered inadequate [ |
| Test-retest reliability 0.90 | ||||||||
| CABS [ | 5–10 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| DP-II [ | Birth—7 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Specificity 67% [ | N/A |
| Sensitivity 50% [ | ||||||||
| PEDI-CAT [ | Birth—20 | Comparative Fit Index 0.93–0.98 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Intra-class correlation > 0.95 | N/A |
| RFS [ | Not reported | Inter-item reliability 0.92 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Prediction accuracy of 78.8% | N/A |
| Test-retest reliability 0.68–0.92 | ||||||||
| Inter-rater reliability 0.21–0.82 | ||||||||
| ABAS II [ | Birth—89 | Comparative Fit Index 0.96 | Considered good [ | N/A | Considered inadequate [ | N/A | N/A | Considered inadequate [ |
| Internal consistency < 0.80 | ||||||||
| Test-retest reliability < 0.90 | ||||||||
| Inter-rater reliability < 0.60 | ||||||||
| ASBI [ | 3 (utilised in study) | Scale reliabilities 0.71–0.79 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| DABS [ | 4–21 | Comparative Fit Index < 0.95 | N/A | N/A | Composite reliability 0.76–0.88 | N/A | Specificity 89–91% [ | N/A |
| Sensitivity 81–98% [ | ||||||||
| Vineland II [ | Birth—90 | Internal consistency < 0.90 | Considered good [ | N/A | Considered inadequate [ | N/A | Considered good [ | Considered adequate [ |
| Test-retest reliability < 0.80 | ||||||||
| Interrater reliability < 0.70 | ||||||||
| CI [ | 3–16 | Internal consistency 0.84–0.98 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ‘shows evidence of discriminant validity’ [ | N/A |
| Interrater reliability 0.78–0.92 |
Note: References to articles are included in brackets; Despite having newer versions available for Vineland and ABAS scales, analysed articles referenced earlier versions.
Figure 1Percentage of reviewed articles published in each year.