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Journal Article

Citation

Whelihan WM, DiCarlo MA, Paul RH. Arch. Clin. Neuropsychol. 2005; 20(2): 217-228.

Affiliation

Brown University School of Medicine, RI, USA. wwhel@brown.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15770793

Abstract

The study focused on the role of traditional and computer-administered visual attention and executive measures in the prediction of driving competence in older individuals with early-stage cognitive decline. A group of 23 patients with questionable dementia by Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR=0.5) was evaluated with a group of 23 age-matched controls. For the patient group, correlational analyses revealed that road-test performance was significantly related to a number of executive and visual attention measures but not to other neuropsychological measures. For the control group, road-test performance was only significantly related to age. A hierarchical regression procedure was utilized to further explore the contribution of specific executive and visual attention measures and 46% of the variance in road-test performance was attributable to these measures for the patient group. A discriminant function analysis utilizing executive and visual attention measures for the entire group of participants classified those who passed and failed the road test with 80% accuracy. Neuropsychological executive and visual attention measures may play a useful role in determining competence to drive in older individuals with early-stage cognitive decline.

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