Standardization of the Comprehensive Attention Test for the Korean Children and Adolescents.
- Author:
Hanik K YOO
1
;
Jungsun LEE
;
Sung Hee KANG
;
Eun Hee PARK
;
Jaesuk JUNG
;
Boong Nyun KIM
;
Jung Woo SON
;
Tae Won PARK
;
Bongseok KIM
;
Young Sik LEE
Author Information
1. Department of Psychiatry, College of Medicine University of Ulsan, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Computerized Comprehensive Attention Test;
Child;
Adolescent;
ADHD
- MeSH:
Adolescent;
Aged;
Animals;
Cats;
Child;
Humans;
Memory, Short-Term;
Reproducibility of Results
- From:Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
2009;20(2):68-75
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVES: This study was conducted in order to develop and obtain the normative data of the computerized Comprehensive Attention Test (CAT) in Korean children and adolescents. It also aimed to evaluate the reliability and validity of the CAT. METHODS: We developed the computerized CAT which includes the selective attention task, the sustained attention to response task, the flanker task, the divided attention task, and the spatial working memory task. We investigated the testretest reliability and the construction validity of this computerized version by using the data from 21 children, and gathered the normative data of 912 subjects, aged 4 to 15 years, dwelling in the Metropolitan Seoul area in 2008. RESULTS: No statistical differences between means of the tests and retests of the CAT were observed. The mean of the correlation coefficient of the test-retest scores was 0.715. The results from the factor analyses explained 51.7% of the cumulative variance. In addition, the normative data for all of the CAT subtests were obtained. CONCLUSION: The computerized CAT can be used as a reliable and valid tool in both clinical and research settings for Korean children and adolescents with or without neuropsychiatric conditions such as attention deficit.