Title: CAT Author
1(No Transcript)
2CAT Author
- Bruce A. Bracken, PhD
- Professor
- The College of William Mary
- School of Education
- P.O. Box 8795
- Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795
- (757) 221-1712
- babrac_at_wm.edu
- www.psychoeducational.com
3CAT Author
- Barbara S. Boatwright, PhD
- Licensed Clinical Psychologist
- Psychology Associates of Mt. Pleasant
- 1041 Johnnie Dodds Blvd. Suite 14 B
- Mt. Pleasant, SC 29464
- barbarasboatwright_at_comcast.net
4Historical Perspective of Attention Deficit
- Originally referred to as Minimal Brain
Dysfunction - 1980 DSM-III identified Attention Deficit with
(ADHD) and without Hyperactivity (ADD) - Core
Symptoms - Sustained Attention -
Impulsivity - Motor Activity - ADHD youth tend to be more disruptive and
aggressive than ADD youth - ADHD youth have more comorbid psychiatric and
educational disorders (e.g., conduct problems,
LD, poor peer relations) - More recent developments have focused on
separating ADHD from other psychiatric conditions
(e.g., Bipolar Disorder, Anxiety, Under
Socialized Youth) - ADHD has 8 to 10 prevalence rate (APA, 2000)
more males than females
5Historical Perspective of Attention Deficit
- ADHD as a life-long condition- Early
conceptualizations were that adults out-grew
ADHD - Follow up studies revealed - 30 to 80 of
children with ADHD continued symptom
manifestation into adulthood - Lower adult
educational and occupational success - Lower
socioeconomic status - More difficulty with
co-workers and employers - Higher incidence of
psychopathology - Increased likelihood of
substance abuse - ADHD Residual Type (DSM-III-R)- Continuation of
ADHD symptoms into adulthood
6Historical Perspective of Attention Deficit
- American Academy of Pediatrics To confirm a
diagnosis of ADHD related behaviors must - Occur in more than one setting, such as home,
school, and social situations. - Be more severe than in other children the same
age. - Begin before the child reaches 7 years of age.
- Make it difficult for the person to function at
school, home, and/or in social situations.
7DSM-IV ADHD Criteria
- Six or more symptoms of inattention present for
at least 6 months to a point that is disruptive
and inappropriate for developmental level - Inattention
- Inattention to details makes careless mistakes
in school, work, or other activities. - Has difficulty attending to tasks or play
activities. - Does not seem to listen when spoken to.
- Does not follow instructions and fails to finish
schoolwork, chores, or duties in the workplace. - Often has difficulty organizing activities.
- Often avoids, dislikes, or doesn't want to
sustain mental effort for a long period of time - Loses things needed for tasks and activities
- Easily distracted.
- Forgetful in daily activities.
8DSM-IV ADHD Criteria
- Six or more of the following symptoms of
hyperactivity-impulsivity present for at least 6
months to an extent that is disruptive and
inappropriate for developmental level - Hyperactivity
- Fidgets with hands or feet or squirms in seat.
- Gets up from seat when remaining in seat is
expected. - Runs about or climbs when and where it is not
appropriate (adolescents or adults may feel very
restless). - Has difficulty playing or enjoying leisure
activities quietly. - Is often "on the go" or often acts as if "driven
by a motor". - Talks excessively.
9DSM-IV ADHD Criteria
- Six or more of the following symptoms of
hyperactivity-impulsivity present for at least 6
months to an extent that is disruptive and
inappropriate for developmental level
Impulsivity - blurts out answers before questions have been
finished. - Has difficulty waiting one's turn.
- Interrupts or intrudes on others (e.g., butts
into conversations). - Some symptoms present before age 7 years.
- Some impairment from the symptoms is present in
two or more settings (e.g. at school/work and at
home). - Clear evidence of significant impairment in
social, school, or work functioning. - Symptoms do not happen only during the course of
a Pervasive Developmental Disorder,
Schizophrenia, or other Psychotic Disorder.
Symptoms are not better accounted for by another
mental disorder (e.g. Mood Disorder, Anxiety
Disorder).
10DSM-IV ADHD Criteria
- Based on these criteria, three types of ADHD are
identified - ADHD, Combined Type if criteria from
Inattention, Hyperactivity, and Impulsivity are
documented - ADHD, Predominantly Inattentive Type if
Inattention is documented, but Impulsivity and
Hyperactivity are not - ADHD, Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive Type
if Hyperactivity and Impulsivity are documented,
but Inattention is not
11CAT-C and CAT-AClinical Assessment of
Attention Deficit
12CAT Features
- CAT-CKiddy CAT
- Ages
- 8 to 18 years
- Forms
- Self Report
- Parent Report
- Teacher Report
- CAT-A
- Ages
- 19 to 79 years
- Forms
- Childhood Memories
- Current Adult Symptoms
13CAT Features
- Employs a four-point Item response format
- Strongly Agree
- Agree
- Disagree
- Strongly Disagree
- CAT is accompanied with optional CAT-SP that
scores, profiles, reports data, and facilitates
interpretation - Standard scores (T-scores)
- Percentile ranks
- Confidence intervals
- Qualitative classifications
- Graphical profile display
14CAT Features
- Assesses behaviors that correspond to DSM-IV/AAP
- Clinical Symptoms Inattention, Hyperactivity,
Impulsivity - Multiple Contexts School/work, Social, Personal
- Differentiates Sensations (Internal) from Actions
(External) - Life-span in nature (ages 8 to 79 years)
- Normed to address issue of developmentally
inappropriate levels - Software scoring program that scores, profiles,
reports, and stores examinees data - Multiple applications
- Clinical
- Educational
- Medical
- Research
15A Multidimensional, Multi-Step, Multi-Year
Process
Constructing the CAT
16Content Identification
- Approached the CAT from Brackens (1992)
context-dependent model of adjustment - Reviewed and evaluated existing attention deficit
scales - Identified relevant content
- Literature on attention deficit
- Item content on existing instruments
- Current diagnostic criteria from DSM-IV
- Suggestions from colleagues
- 4. Wrote 144 item adult scale according to
diagnostic criteria and content analysis
17Item Developmentand Refinement
- Piloted adult form (N 108) 17 to 48 years of
age - reduced to 54 items on Current Symptoms
Form - matching 54 items on Childhood Symptoms
Form - Validated adult form (N 369) 17 to 53 years of
age - ADHD (N 67) - LD (N 38) - ADHD/LD
(N 44) - Controls (N 221) - correct
classification 79 to 88 - Final items selected to include equal numbers of
items within each of 18 individual cells - - Three Clinical Scales
- - Three Context Clusters
- - Two Locus Clusters
- (3 Clinical scales x 3 context clusters x 2 locus
clusters 18 cells)
18Item Tryout, Norming, and Finalization
- 42 item child form (CAT-C) was developed to match
item content on the CAT-A - CAT-C Self Report -
CAT-C Parent Report - CAT-C Teacher Report - CAT-C forms were piloted and validated (N 50),
resulting in 83 to 88 correct classification of
ADHD and control students - CAT-A and CAT-C scales were normed, validated,
finalized, and published
19CAT Scales and Clusters
- Clinical Symptoms
- Inattention
- Impulsivity
- Hyperactivity
20CAT Scales and Clusters
- Clinical Symptoms
- Inattention
- Impulsivity
- Hyperactiity
- Contexts
- Personal
- Academic/Occupational
- Social
21CAT Scales and Clusters
- Clinical Symptoms
- Inattention
- Impulsivity
- Hyperactivity
- Contexts
- Personal
- Academic/Occupational
- Social
- Locus
- Internal
- External
22CAT Blueprint
23Final Forms
- 108-item Self Report CAT-A
- 3 Clinical Scales, 3 Context Clusters, 2 Locus
Clusters - 54-item Current Symptoms Form
- 54-item Childhood Memories Form
- (10 - 15 minute total administration)
- 42-item CAT-C Self-Report Form
- 3 Clinical Scales, 3 Context Clusters, 2 Locus
Clusters - CAT-C Self Report (5 10 minute administration)
- 42-item CAT-C Parent Report Form
- 3 Clinical Scales, 3 Context Clusters, 2 Locus
Clusters - CAT-C Parent Report (5 10 minute
administration) - 42-item CAT-C Teacher Report Form
- 3 Clinical Scales, 3 Context Clusters, 2 Locus
Clusters - CAT-C Teacher Report (5 10 minute
administration)
24CAT-C Internal Consistency
CAT-C Scale/Cluster Self Parent Teacher
Clinical ScaleInattention .85 .91 .94Impulsiv
ity .82 .88 .92Hyperactivity .77 .85 .90 Context
ClusterPersonal .82 .88 .91Academic/Occupational
.84 .89 .93Social .75 .85 .89 Locus
ClusterInternal .86 .91 .94 External .87 .91 .94
Clinical Index .92 .95 .97 Reliabilities are
also reported by age, gender, race/ethnicity
25CAT-C Stability Coefficients
CAT-C Scale/Cluster Self Parent Teacher
Clinical ScaleInattention .87 .88 .67Impulsiv
ity .82 77 .74Hyperactivity .66 .75 .78 Context
ClusterPersonal .81 .82 .70Academic/Occupational
.73 .82 .68Social .80 .70 .77 Locus
ClusterInternal .74 .71 .77 External .83 .86 .69
Clinical Index .82 .83 .73 Corrected for
restriction or expansion in range
26CAT-A and CAT-C Veracity
- CAT Veracity Scales
- Negative Impression - - degree to which
individual consistently responds in a negative
manner - Infrequency - - extent to which individual
endorses items in extreme manner to items
infrequently endorsed in extreme manner by
normative sample - Positive Impression - - extent to which
individual responds in an unusually positive
manner
27CAT-A and CAT-C Validity
- Forms of validity investigated
- Content Validity (DSM, Literature)
- Concurrent Validity (i.e., Convergent/Discriminant
)- Connors Rating Scales- Brown
Attention-Deficit Disorder Scales-
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Test-
Clinical Assessment of Behavior- Clinical
Assessment of Depression - Construct Validity- Intercorrelations-
Exploratory Factor Analyses - Contrasted Groups (i.e., ADHD, LD)
28CAT-C ADHD / LD Contrast
ADHD Self Ratings LD Self Ratings ADHD Parent
Ratings LD Parent Ratings ADHD Teacher Ratings LD
Teacher Ratings
29CAT-C ADHD / LD Contrast
ADHD Self Ratings LD Self Ratings ADHD Parent
Ratings LD Parent Ratings ADHD Teacher Ratings LD
Teacher Ratings
30CAT-C ADHD / LD Contrast
ADHD Self Ratings LD Self Ratings ADHD Parent
Ratings LD Parent Ratings ADHD Teacher Ratings LD
Teacher Ratings
31Administration
- For Multiple-Source, Multiple-Context Ratings
- CAT-C Forms should be completed by
- one or both parents/ guardians
- one or more of the childs teachers
- Child should rate self
- CAT-A includes only a self-report scale
- Both Childhood Memories and Current Symptom
Scales should be completed by the adult
32CAT Administration Scoring
33CAT-C Teacher
- Scale Raw T ile Qualitative classification
- Clinical
- Inattention (ATT) 47 74 gt 99 Significant clinical
risk - Impulsivity (IMP) 38 64 91 Mild clinical risk
- Hyperactivity (HYP) 43 69 97 Mild clinical
risk - Context
- Personal (PER) 44 71 98 Significant clinical
risk - Acad/Occup (A/O) 43 67 96 Mild clinical risk
- Social (SOC) 41 69 97 Mild clinical risk
- Locus cluster
- Internal (INT) 60 65 94 Mild clinical risk
- External (EXT) 68 74 99 Significant clinical
risk - CAT-C Clinical Index(CAT-C CI) 128 70
98 Significant clinical risk
34 CAT-C Self and Teacher
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36Administration
- Test Kits Include
- Comprehensive 240 page Professional Manual
- 3 Rating Forms
- 42-item CAT-C Self Report Record Form
- 42-item CAT-C Parent Report Record Form
- 42-item CAT-C Teacher Report Record Form
- CAT-A Includes 2 Self-Report Scales
- 54-item Childhood Memories Scale
- 54-item Current Symptoms Scale
- CAT Scoring Program Software and Users Manual
are optional
37Administration
- For Multiple-Source, Multiple-Context Ratings
- CAT-C Forms should be completed by
- one or both parents/ guardians
- one or more of the childs teachers
- Child should rate self
- CAT-A includes only a self-report scale
- Both Childhood Memories and Current Symptom
Scales should be completed by the adult
38CAT-A Internal Consistency
- CAT-A Scale/Cluster Childhood Current
Memories Symptoms - Clinical ScaleInattention .89 .86Impulsivity .85
.85Hyperactivity .85 .76 - Context ClusterPersonal .84 .80Academic/Occupati
onal .90 .68Social .78 .81 - Locus ClusterInternal .89 .83 External .90 .83
- Clinical Index .94 .91
- Total Scale Clinical Index
.96 - Coefficients also are reported for age, gender,
and race/ethnicity
39CAT-A Stability Coefficients
- CAT-A Scale/Cluster Childhood Current Memories Sy
mptoms - Clinical ScaleInattention .77 .82Impulsivity .83
.84Hyperactivity .83 .83 - Context ClusterPersonal .79 .83Academic/Occupati
onal .84 .81Social .78 .83 - Locus ClusterInternal .86 .86 External .81 .83
- Clinical Index .86 .87
- Total Scale Clinical Index
.88 - Coefficients are corrected for restriction and
expansion in range
40CAT-C ADHD / LD Contrast
ADHD Adult Ratings LD Adult Ratings