Title: DeanWoodcock Neuropsychological Assessment System
1(No Transcript)
2Dean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Assessment System
3Neuropsychological Screening Using the
Dean-Woodcock Neuropsychology Assessment System
- Raymond S. Dean, Ph.D.,ABPP,ABPN
- Ball State University
- Scott A. Decker, Ph.D.
- Georgia State University
4Overview
- History Trends in Neuropsychology
- Relevance of WJ-III for neuropsychology
- History Utility of Sensor Motor Exam
- Dean-Woodcock Sensory Motor Battery
- Administration, Scoring Interpation
- Clinical Studies
5A RATIONALE FOR NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
- History of Neuropsychological Assessment
- Brain-Behavior Relationships-Theory
- Development of Actuarial Approach
- Advances in Neuroimaging
- Changing Need for Evaluation
- 1. Diagnosis
- 2. Functional Assessment
- 3. Baseline Assessment
- 4. Treatment Planning(ADA IEP)
-
6The Need for Neuropsychological Assessments
- Neuropsychological assessments contribute unique
information regarding the functional strengths
and weaknesses of patients necessary in diagnosis
of disorders and for accurate prognoses and
rehabilitation planning that brain imaging cannot
provide (Volpe, 2003) - Neuropsychological assessments provide
information regarding the presence, severity and,
at times, location of the brain damage (Stringer
Green, 1996).
7Interpretive Techniques
- Functional Level / Descriptive
- Right-Left Differences
- Pattern Analysis
- Pathognomonic Signs
8The Dean-Woodcock Neuropsychological System
- The D-WNB was designed to provide information
concerning cognitive ability, achievement,
memory, language, and executive functioning as
well as a more reliable and in-depth assessment
of sensory and motor functions (Hill et al.,
2000) - The D-WNB includes
- The Dean-Woodcock Emotional Status Examination
- The Dean-Woodcock Structured Neuropsychological
Interview - The Woodcock-Johnson Tests III of Cognitive
Abilities - The Woodcock-Johnson Tests III of Achievement
- The Dean-Woodcock Sensory Motor Battery
- Completion of a MMPI-2, MMPI-A, or PIC is
OPTIONAL but recommended
9Functioning Why Assess Sensory-Motor?
- A major component of neuropsychological batteries
is the assessment of sensory-motor functioning,
which looks at the skills that allow individuals
to receive and interpret sensory input and direct
voluntary motor movements - Sensory-motor skills have significant
implications regarding neurological functioning,
assessment of them provides clinicians with
information about the patients neurological
functioning and many pathognomic signs (Volpe,
2003) - Localized damage to sensory or motor
structures may manifest as specific behavioral
deficits or pathognomic signs (Hill et al.,
2000).
10Measures of Sensory-Motor Skills
- Historically, measures of sensory and motor
functions have been considered clinical measures
in that the administration is not standardized
(Archeneaux et al., 1997) - Lack of standardization in the presentation of
sensory and motor measures exposes the data to
several factors which may contaminate the results
(Archeneaux et al., 1997) - Although professionals assessing these functions
are generally highly trained, the
non-standardized procedures may result in
observer bias that may increase the probability
of a variety of errors such as false positives
(Cohen et al., 1988)
11Measures of Sensory-Motor Skills
- In an effort to increase standardization of
measurement of sensory and motor functions, the
Dean-Woodcock Sensory-Motor Battery (D-WSMB) was
developed - The Dean-Woodcock Sensory-Motor Battery is a
standardized measure of sensory-motor skills that
is part of a new neuropsychological measure, the
Dean-Woodcock Neuropsychological Battery (D-WNB)
12Dean-Woodcock Sensory Motor Battery
- The Dean-Woodcock Sensory Motor Battery (DWSMB,
Dean Woodcock, 2003) was created to address the
psychometric and theoretical shortcomings of
other measures, as well as to provide an easy to
administer comprehensive measure of sensory and
motor skills - Subtests which measure sensory functions, such as
visual, auditory, and tactile perception, and 10
subtests which measure cortical and subcortical
motor functioning. - The scores obtained on subtests from the DWSMB
can be compared to a normative sample of over
1,000 individuals, ranging from 4 to plus 90
years of age which yields derived W-scores. - The DWSMB goes beyond the traditional cutoff
approach to produce W-difference scores. The
greater specificity of W-scores allows
consideration of a few errors that could be
indicative of sensory-motor impairment and also
provides scores that can be used for normative or
ipsative analysis
13 D-WSMB
- Traditional sensory and motor tests have a lack
of nationally representative normative samples,
reliance on compilations of norms from multiple
sources, and a paucity of data on reliability and
validity (Woodward, Ridenour, Dean, Woodcock,
2002) - The importance of valid and reliable assessment
measures is magnified for sensory and motor
tasks, since even one error may be seen as a
pathognomic sign of cerebral dysfunction - Even the Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological
Battery, the most widely used neuropsychological
battery, has been faulted for its standardization
and norms. However, the battery was never
standardized on a representative, stratified
sample of healthy subjects. As with other
procedures lacking appropriate standardization
and a set of widely accepted norms, there is much
variability both in how HRB data are obtained as
well as in their interpretation. With so many
available norms, it is possible to choose ones
based on desired outcomes. (pg. 673, Lezak,
Howieson, Loring, 2004).
14 D-WSMB
- Commonly used measures of sensory-motor skills
tend to rely on upper extremity sensory and motor
assessment, and do not sufficiently evaluate
lower extremity motor functioning that can
reflect subcortical dysfunction, such as gait,
station, coordination, and vestibular dysfunction - Sensory-motor skills are predictive of higher
order cognitive processing and academic skills,
such as reading, writing, and mathematics - Reitan and Wolfson (2003) indicated that, the
close dependence of sensory-motor functions on
the biological status of the nervous system
permits measured deficits to be related to brain
impairment, as contrasted with the much greater
dependence of higher-level brain functions on
environmental opportunities, educational
advantage, and so forth (Reitan Wolfson, 2003,
p. 13).
15The Dean-Woodcock Sensory-Motor Battery
- The D-WSMB includes 18 subtests that were adapted
from the numerous neurologic and
neuropsychological sensory and motor measures
(Hill et al., 2000). - Eight sensory tests that assess visual, auditory,
and tactile acuity and perception. - Three tests of primarily subcortical functioning
- Five tests of predominately cortical functioning
16IMPORTANT FEATURES OF THE DEAN-WOODCOCK SENSORY
MOTOR BATTERY
- Wide age range(4-90 years)
- Breadth of content
- Discrepancy procedures
- Linguistic accommodations
- Standardized- Ease of Administration and Scoring
- Spanish and English Versions Included
- Use of W diff scores allow Integration with
WJ-III - 50 minute Administration
- Levels of Interpretation
- Scores Based Normals
17Continuum of Progress in Theories and
Intelligence Batteries
Multiple (Incomplete)
Multiple (Complete)
Interacting Cog/NonCog
General (g)
Dichotomous
Binet
WISC KABC/KAIT
WJ SB4 CAS DAS WISC III
WJ-R
CHC Theory
Gt
18NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS FROM WJ-III INCLUDED
IN THE DEAN-WOODCOCK
- General Intellectual Ability/Performance
- Executive Functioning/Fluid Reasoning
- Memory/Learning
- Verbal Comprehension-Knowledge
- Quantitative Ability
- Academic Achievement
- Processing Speed
- Auditory Processing
- Visual Processing
19COMPONENTS OF THE D-W NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT SYSTEM (Continued)
- VII Sensory Functions
- Visual Acuity
- Confrontation
- Naming Pictures
- Auditory Acuity
- Tactile Exam
- Object
Identification - Finger
Identification - Tactile
Localization - VIII Motor Functions
- Gait and Station
- Romberg
- Construction
- Finger to Nose
- Hand to Thigh
- Mime Movements
- Left-Right
Movements - Finger Tapping
20Test Administration
- Theory and Test Administration
- Functional Systems (e.g., Vision)
- Neuropsychological Functions
- Neurodevelopmental Functions
- Structural damage/toxic effects
- Maturational Lag
- Environmental deprivation
- Apotosis and pruning
21Test 1 Lateral Preference
- Measure of handedness or hand preference
- Rating scale
- 1Left Always to 5 Right Mostly
- Common Errors
- Not using stimulus booklet
- Cortical Motor System
- Organization of Cortical Motor Systems
22Handedness
23Test 2 Near-Point VA
- Tests visual acuity
- Use E line for subjects unable to name letters
- Hold card 14 inches from eye
- Use eye occluder
- Check for vision correction (glasses)
24Test 3 Visual Confrontation
- Tests visual fields
- Nasal and temporal fields
- RL Simultaneous
- Score 0 or 1
- 1 if R1, L1
- 0 if R or L 0
25Pattern of performance based on neuroanatomical
structure of visual system
26Test 4 Naming Pictures
- 21 drawings of objects
- Stimulus book
- Common mistakes
- Fail to query
- Ceiling rule 3 highest incorrect
27Visual Pathways
28Test 5 Auditory Acuity
- Simple auditory detection
- Most common mistakes
- Scoring 1 for each correct response
- If R and L correct, than Both 1 (not 2)
- Maintaining 3 inches distance
29Test 6 Tactile Exam-Palm Writing
30Tactile letters / numbers
- Most common error
- Blindfold subject
- Writing numbers
- Use standardized writing guidelines
31Test 7 Object ID
- Astereognosis
- Do not allow subjects to see objects
- Do not allow subject to tap object
- Query some items
32Test 8 Finger ID
- Finger agnosia
- Identify fingers while blindfolded
33Test 9 Tactile Simultaneous Localization
- Part 1 Hands Only
- Part 2 Hands and Cheeks
- Recording scores
- Both 1
34Test 10 Gait and Station
- Rating scale of Gait
- 4 is highest score (Normal Gait)
- Monitor Subject
35Test 11 Romberg
- Gait without use of vision
- Rating scale
- Stand close to subjects with arms in supporting
position
36Test 11 Romberg
- Gait without use of vision
- Rating scale
- Stand close to subjects with arms in supporting
position
37Test 12 Construction
- Visual-motor construction
- Draw cross, draw clock
- Stimulus book for cross
38Visual Disorders
- Agnosia inability to visually identify
- Hemianopia half loss of visual field
- Scotoma small lesions, spots in visual field
- Optic Ataxia deficit in visually guided hand
movements - Prosopagnosia facial agnosia
- Alexia inability to read
- Neglect
39Test 13 Coordination
- Part A
- Touch tip of nose than examiners finger
- Examiner moves finger to 20 different positions
- Rating scale
- Part B Hand Thigh
- Slap hand on thigh
- Common Error 20 times not 20 seconds
40Test 14Mime Movement
- Ideomotor dyspraxia (knowledge movement)
- Show me how
- 1 point for correct response
- 0 if
- Includes additional actions or sequences
- Omits actions
- Uses hand or arm as object (development)
41Test 15 Left-Right Movement
- Left-Right confusion
- Developmental trends
- Observation important (hesitancy, confusion, etc.)
42Test 16 Finger Tapping
- Use tapper or calculator
- Norms based on calculator (less expensive)
- Use appropriate calculator
- Common Errors
- Wrong norms (male and female)
43Test 16 Finger Tapping
- Use tapper or calculator
- Norms based on calculator (less expensive)
- Use appropriate calculator
- Common Errors
- Wrong norms (male and female)
44Test 18 Grip Strength
- Dynamometer (not included)
- Adjust to fit hand while standing and pointing to
floor - Score is average for 3 trials
45Overview of score calculation
- Convert raw score to W-score on scoring table
- Record W-score on interpretive page
- Find age appropriate Ref-W
- Subtract W from Ref-W (W-Ref-W W-Diff
- Calculate Impairment Index by adding all W and
all Ref-W and subtracting and dividing by total
number of tests - Record functional levels (use R L)
46Levels of Impairment
47Interpretive Descriptions (p. 98)
48Interpretive Techniques
- Functional Level / Descriptive
- Right-Left Differences
- Pattern Analysis
- Pathognomonic Signs