| Literature DB >> 33555446 |
Matthew L Cohen1,2, Aaron J Boulton3, Alyssa M Lanzi4, Elyse Sutherland4, Rebecca Hunting Pompon4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) vary in their psycholinguistic complexity. This study examined whether response time to PROM items is related to psycholinguistic attributes of the item and/or the self-reported cognitive ability of the respondent.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive impairments; Patient-reported outcome measures; Patient-reported outcomes; Reaction time; Self-report
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33555446 PMCID: PMC8178143 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-021-02778-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Fig. 1Neuro-QoL item response times. Response times for 177 Neuro-QoL items in the Wave 2 clinical sample (N = 577). Approximately 0.25% of recorded response time observations were > 120 s and not shown in the figure
Demographic characteristics of Neuro-QoL Wave 2 clinical sample (N = 581)
| Age (M, SD) | 55.21 (14.31) |
| Sex (%) | |
| Female | 54 |
| Male | 46 |
| Race (%) | |
| White | 87 |
| Black/African–American | 12 |
| American Indian/Alaskan Native | 2 |
| Asian | 2 |
| Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander | 0 |
| Occupation (%) | |
| Homemaker | 8 |
| Unemployed | 9 |
| Retired | 30 |
| Disability | 34 |
| Leave of absence | 1 |
| Full-time employed | 21 |
| Part-time employed | 10 |
| Full-time student | 1 |
| Marital status (%) | |
| Married | 62 |
| Divorced | 11 |
| Widowed | 5 |
| Living with someone | 5 |
| Separated | 2 |
| Never married | 16 |
| Income (%) | |
| > $20,000 | 16 |
| $20,000–$49,000 | 35 |
| $50,000–$99,000 | 28 |
| > $100,000 | 21 |
| Education (%) | |
| Some high school or less | 3 |
| High school or equivalent | 19 |
| Some college | 29 |
| College degree | 29 |
| Advanced degree | 20 |
| Neurological condition (%) | |
| ALS | 14 |
| Epilepsy | 20 |
| Multiple sclerosis | 28 |
| Parkinson’s | 21 |
| Stroke | 17 |
These data were also reported in Gershon et al. [22] and are reprinted here with permission from the copyright holder
Descriptive statistics for 99th percentile-trimmed dataset
| Variable | SD | Median | Min | Max | Skew | Kurtosis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item psycholinguistic characteristics | ||||||||
| Words | 177 | 8.16 | 3.88 | 8 | 3 | 26 | 1.12 | 2.18 |
| Syllables | 177 | 11.94 | 6.08 | 11 | 3 | 42 | 1.25 | 2.95 |
| Avg. word frequency | 177 | 387,539.08 | 177,384.88 | 388,259 | 10,707 | 742,078 | − 0.05 | − 0.58 |
| Avg. age of acquisition | 177 | 4.56 | 0.83 | 4.42 | 2.91 | 7.21 | 0.93 | 0.70 |
| Avg. imageability | 177 | 341.61 | 60.51 | 337 | 179 | 489 | 0.30 | 0.03 |
| Cognitive function scores | ||||||||
| Neuro-QoL cognitive function | 577 | 50.01 | 9.82 | 49.7 | 17.9 | 69.9 | − 0.14 | − 0.09 |
| Response times (in s) | ||||||||
| Overall | 99,646 | 9.03 | 6.84 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.40 | 8.00 |
| Condition | ||||||||
| ALS | 12,911 | 6.68 | 5.95 | 5 | 1 | 52 | 3.13 | 13.71 |
| Epilepsy | 20,690 | 8.47 | 6.67 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.43 | 8.40 |
| MS | 27,928 | 9.97 | 7.02 | 8 | 1 | 52 | 2.37 | 7.26 |
| Parkinson’s | 20,944 | 8.23 | 6.03 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.66 | 10.67 |
| Stroke | 17,173 | 10.91 | 7.50 | 9 | 1 | 52 | 2.08 | 5.96 |
| Item bank | ||||||||
| Anxiety | 4567 | 8.48 | 6.38 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.73 | 10.89 |
| Ability to participate in SRA | 4542 | 9.53 | 7.03 | 8 | 1 | 52 | 2.31 | 7.51 |
| Cognitive function | 22,689 | 10.42 | 7.77 | 8 | 1 | 52 | 2.05 | 5.51 |
| Depression | 4565 | 7.14 | 5.42 | 6 | 1 | 52 | 3.14 | 14.66 |
| Emot. and behav. dys | 10,269 | 7.51 | 5.32 | 6 | 1 | 52 | 2.78 | 12.40 |
| Fatigue | 10,828 | 8.06 | 5.69 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.55 | 10.16 |
| Lower ext.—mobility | 9718 | 11.45 | 8.17 | 9 | 1 | 52 | 1.89 | 4.56 |
| Pos. affect and well being | 5120 | 8.47 | 6.45 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.37 | 7.92 |
| Sleep disturbance | 11,394 | 8.26 | 5.98 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.65 | 10.84 |
| Stigma | 4571 | 8.26 | 5.90 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.53 | 9.34 |
| Upper ext.—fine motor/ADL | 11,383 | 8.60 | 6.70 | 7 | 1 | 52 | 2.57 | 8.96 |
Values based on 1% trimmed sample (i.e., scores retained at or below 99th percentile)
Bivariate correlations between item-level predictor variables
| Words | Syllables | Avg. word frequency | Avg. age of acquisition | Avg. imageability | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item psycholinguistic characteristics | |||||
| Words | |||||
| Syllables | 0.91 [0.89, 0.93] | ||||
| Average word frequency | − 0.15 [− 0.29, − 0.01] | − 0.28 [− 0.41, − 0.14] | |||
| Average age of acquisition | − 0.12 [− 0.26, − 0.03] | 0.10 [− 0.04, 0.24] | − 0.13 [− 0.27, 0.01] | ||
| Average imageability | − 0.42 [− 0.53, − 0.29] | − 0.47 [− 0.58, − 0.35] | 0.30 [0.17, 0.43] | − 0.05 [− 0.19, 0.10] | |
| Response format (difficulty vs. frequency) | 0.04 [− 0.11, 0.19] | 0.05 [− 0.09, 0.20] | − 0.44 [− 0.55, − 0.31] | 0.13 [− 0.01, 0.28] | − 0.06 [− 0.21, 0.09] |
Correlations based on 1% trimmed sample (i.e., scores retained at or below 99th percentile)
Correlation coefficients and 95% confidence intervals based on Fisher’s z transformation
LMM results for 99th percentile-trimmed sample
| Model parameters | Main effects only | Full model | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Est. | CI | Est. | CI | |
| Fixed effects | ||||
| Intercept | [7.17, 8.55] | [7.17, 8.55] | ||
| Syllables | [0.62, 1.13] | [0.63, 1.13] | ||
| Word frequency | − 0.22 | [− 0.48, 0.05] | -0.22 | [− 0.48, 0.05] |
| Age of acquisition | − 0.06 | [− 0.28, 0.16] | − 0.06 | [− 0.28, 0.16] |
| Imageability | 0.13 | [− 0.12, 0.39] | 0.13 | [− 0.12, 0.39] |
| Response format | [0.83, 1.87] | [0.83, 1.87] | ||
| Cognitive function | − | [− 1.05, − 0.44] | − | [− 1.00, − 0.39] |
| ALS (ref = epilepsy) | − 0.91 | [− 1.98, 0.15] | − 0.92 | [− 1.98, 0.15] |
| MS (ref = epilepsy) | [0.80, 2.45] | [0.80, 2.45] | ||
| Parkinson’s (ref = epilepsy) | − 0.05 | [− 0.94, 0.84] | − 0.05 | [− 0.94, 0.84] |
| Stroke (ref = epilepsy) | [1.65, 3.50] | [1.65, 3.50] | ||
| Syllables × cognitive function | − | [− 0.17, − 0.09] | ||
| Imageability × cognitive function | [0.05, 0.12] | |||
| Response format × cognitive function | − | [− 0.24, − 0.10] | ||
| Random effects | ||||
| Individual | 3.46 | [3.26, 3.67] | 3.46 | [3.27, 3.67] |
| Item | 1.46 | [1.32, 1.63] | 1.50 | [1.32, 1.63] |
| Residual | 5.42 | [5.40, 5.45] | 5.42 | [5.40, 5.44] |
Coefficients in boldface significant at p < .05
Fig. 2Conditional effects, simple intercepts and slopes. Estimated regression coefficients for three item-level predictors (number of syllables, imageability, response format), conditional on the moderator variable (cognitive function), are shown in the left-hand column. Increased cognitive function was associated with decreased (toward zero) effects for number of syllables and response format, whereas the effect of imageability was increased (away from zero). Associated simple intercepts and slopes—regression lines between each predictor and response time (RT) and plotted at different values of cognitive function (mean and ± 2 standard deviations)—are shown in the right-hand column. These plots show how response times increase with increasing numbers of syllables and when using the difficulty vs. frequency response format, and how these increases are augmented at higher levels of cognitive function. Conversely, for imageability, the positive effect only emerges at higher levels of cognitive function, though the effect is confounded with number of syllables (see Fig. 3)
Fig. 3Conditional effects and simple intercepts and slopes for imageability, when number of words is omitted from model. Estimated regression coefficients for imageability, conditional on the moderator variable (cognitive function) and without the number of words included in the model, are shown on the left. Associated simple intercepts and slopes, plotted at the mean and ± 2 standard deviations and without the number of words included in the model, are shown on the right-hand column