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Race-Norming of Neuropsychological Tests

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOLOGY REVIEW
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 250-262

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11065-009-9090-5

Keywords

Cross-cultural neuropsychology; Neuropsychological assessment; Ethnicity; Neuropsychological test norms

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Recent studies in the United States indicate that some neurologically intact minority groupings perform well below White Americans on neuropsychological tests. This has sparked the production of race-norms, especially for African Americans, that seek to reduce false positive rates (i.e., neurologically intact individuals misdiagnosed with cognitive impairment) in neuropsychological assessments. There are problems with this enterprise including: possible justification for inferior/superior treatment of different racial groupings; unknown effects on false negative rates (i.e., cognitive deficit misdiagnosed as normal); the overlooking of factors possibly responsible for group racial differences (e.g., acculturation); non-scientific and non-operational definitions of race/ethnic groupings; and an impossibly large number of potential race/ethnic groupings for which to generate race-norms. An alternative approach is to use a single set of combined race/ethnic norms and estimate preexisting neuropsychological skill levels by using individual comparison standards. This alternative has been poorly researched, a situation that needs correcting.

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