The CERAD Neuropsychological Battery, includes 7 measures:
Verbal Fluency; Modified Boston Naming; Mini-Mental State;
Word List Learning, Recall and Recognition; Constructional
Praxis. It was originally developed to evaluate patients
with a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease,
but is increasingly used in epidemiological studies of
the incidence and prevalence of dementia in the elderly.
The current study reports norms for African American and
White representative community residents 71 years of age
and older in North Carolina, and compares performance with
that of African Americans in Indianapolis and with Whites
in the Monongahela Valley, Pennsylvania. For all 3 studies,
increased education and younger age was related to better
performance on each of the 7 measures. Sex differences,
when present, tended to favor women. Although on average
African Americans performed more poorly than Whites, with
demographic characteristics controlled, no significant
racial differences were found in the North Carolina sample.
Both African American and White participants in North Carolina
performed more poorly than their racial counterparts in
the other 2 studies, possibly because of selection-induced
differences in health and educational status. Nevertheless,
the use of an identical evaluation battery, such as the
CERAD neuropsychologic instrument, facilitates comparisons
not otherwise possible, and should be encouraged. (JINS,
2001, 7, 502–509.)