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Understand the purpose of cognitive tests, protocol structure, data types, and analyses. Learn about Washington Group Cognitive Test, Traditional vs. Washington Group Protocols, and Cognitive Interview Protocol. Explore response patterns and quality of qualitative data.
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Kristen Miller Questionnaire Design Research Lab National Center for Health Statistics, USA Purpose of cognitive test Structure of protocol Types of cognitive test data & possible analyses Things to keep in mind Washington Group Cognitive Test
Purpose of Cognitive Testing • Interviews: Designed to examine the stages of the question response process • Comprehension, retrieval, judgment, response • Analysis: Identifies… • potential response errors: (e.g. vague concepts, recall problems, inadequate response options) • patterns of interpretation
Traditional Cognitive Testing • Protocol Semi-structured • Data collected are qualitative • Qualitative methodologies for analysis • Small samples: approx. 10 – 30 participants
Washington Group Protocol • Structured Questionnaire • Designed to illustrate: • Administration ease • Interpretations • Factors considered by respondent • Degree of consistency with physical abilities • Differences between subgroups
Cognitive Interview Protocol • Demographic Section: Country, language, gender, age, SES • Question Testing Sections • Core Question • Interviewer Coding • Open-ended Follow-up Probe • Cognitive Follow-up Probe • Functioning Follow-up Probe • Health Questions: subjective health, chronic condition list • Interviewer Debriefing
Interviewer Code: Did the respondent… • need you to repeat any part of the question? Yes/No • have any difficulty using the response options? Yes/No • ask for clarification or qualify their answer? Yes/No
Percent of respondents with no response problems Vision 83.89% Hearing 88.47% Cognitive 85.72% Mobility 91.03% Self-care 93.65% Communication 86.70% N=1,287
Open-ended Follow-up Probe • Can you tell me what you were thinking? Why did you answer [fill with respondent’s answer to the core question]?
Qualitative Data • Varied in quality • A lot missing • Very brief • Provides some insight • E.g. “Because I wear glasses”
Cognitive Follow-up Probes: • How often they had difficulty • The amount of effort they needed to put into the activity • The degree of concern or worry they had regarding the difficulty • Other domain-specific questions • Communication: Shyness question • Cognitive: Reason question
Cognition Cognitive Probe Do you believe that your memory or concentration difficulties are… [Mark all that apply] • because you have too many things to do? • because you getting older? • or, because of something else? Only busy: 28.78% Aging: 25.84% Something else: 43.07%
Functioning Follow-up Probes • Presence of a condition • Use of an assistive device • Degree of difficulty doing related activities
Analysis of Functioning Data • Examine the consistency between: • Washington Group Question responses and • Follow-up functioning questions responses • Goal: explain the discrepancies • Misunderstood word? • Cultural difference? • Translation problem? • Interviewer error? • Error in the follow-up questions? • Other data assist in explanation