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Age, Sex, and Repeated Measures Effects on NASA’s “Cognition” Test Battery in STEM Educated Adults

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BACKGROUND: Cognition is a neurocognitive test battery created at the University of Pennsylvania and adapted by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). It comprises 10 neurocognitive tests that examine multiple domains, and has been validated in a normative sample of STEM-educated adults and compared to NASA’s WinSCAT battery.

METHODS: The purpose of this study was to follow the original sample to assess Cognition and WinSCAT’s test-retest reliability and age, sex, and test-retest interval effects on performance.

RESULTS: Performance on both Cognition and WinSCAT decreased with age but improved with repeated administration due to practice effects, and men had higher scores than women on tasks that required vigilant attention, spatial reasoning, and risk-taking behaviors. Assessment of test-retest reliability showed intraclass coefficients for efficiency ranging from 0.417 to 0.810, reflecting the broad nature of constructs assessed by Cognition.

DISCUSSION: Results largely matched predictions, with some counter-intuitive results for test-retest reliability interval.

Lee G, Moore TM, Basner M, Nasrini J, Roalf DR, Ruparel K, Port AM, Dinges DF, Gur RC. Age, sex, and repeated measures effects on NASA’s “Cognition” Test Battery in STEM educated adults. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2020; 91(1):18–25.

Keywords: Cognition Test Battery for Spaceflight; Penn Computerized Neurocognitive Battery; neurocognition; spaceflight

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 January 2020

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  • This journal (formerly Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine), representing the members of the Aerospace Medical Association, is published monthly for those interested in aerospace medicine and human performance. It is devoted to serving and supporting all who explore, travel, work, or live in hazardous environments ranging from beneath the sea to the outermost reaches of space. The original scientific articles in this journal provide the latest available information on investigations into such areas as changes in ambient pressure, motion sickness, increased or decreased gravitational forces, thermal stresses, vision, fatigue, circadian rhythms, psychological stress, artificial environments, predictors of success, health maintenance, human factors engineering, clinical care, and others. This journal also publishes notes on scientific news and technical items of interest to the general reader, and provides teaching material and reviews for health care professionals.

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