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This study examined the validity of a visual inspection time (IT) task as a measure of processing speed (PS) in a sample of children with and without cerebral palsy (CP). IT tasks measure visualization speed without focusing on the motor response time to indicate decision making about the properties of those stimuli.
Methods:
Participants were 113 children ages 8–16, including 45 with congenital CP, and 68 typically developing peers. Measures were a standard visual IT task that required dual key responding and a modified version using an assistive technology button with response option scanning. Performance on these measures was examined against traditional Wechsler PS measures (Coding, Symbol Search).
Results:
IT performance shared considerable variance with traditional paper-pencil PS measures for the group with CP, but not necessarily in the typically developing group. Concurrent validity was found for both IT task versions with traditional PS measures in the group with CP. IT classification accuracy for lowered PS showed modest sensitivity and good specificity particularly for the modified IT task.
Conclusions:
As measures of PS in children with CP who are unable to validly participate in traditional PS tasks, IT tasks demonstrate adequate concurrent validity and may serve as a beneficial alternative measure of PS in this population.
In one of the earlier definitions of cerebral palsy (CP), Bax described CP as “A disorder of movement and posture due to a defect or lesion of the immature brain” [1]. Over the decades, it became apparent that greater precision in the definition was needed to improve the accuracy and consistency of diagnosis and to enhance communication among researchers and health care providers. In 2004, the workgroup of the International Workshop on Definition and Classification of Cerebral Palsy undertook this challenge [2]. Motor impairment continued to be recognized as the central feature of CP, but the workgroup also appreciated the limitations of defining the disorder exclusively on this basis. It was recommended that a multidimensional and multidisciplinary approach be used to redefine CP, resulting in the following definition:
Cerebral palsy (CP) describes a group of permanent disorders of the development of movement and posture, causing activity limitation, that are attributed to non-progressive disturbances that occurred in the developing fetal or infant brain. The motor disorders of cerebral palsy are often accompanied by disturbances of sensation, perception, cognition, communication, and behaviour, by epilepsy, and by secondary musculoskeletal problems.
The workgroup provided a detailed rationale for each of the terms composing its definition, several of which are of interest to the neuropsychologist [2]. For example, “permanent” reflects the persistence of CP throughout the lifespan, although the clinical presentation may evolve as individuals with CP age.
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