Cognitive factor structure of the NACC UDS-3 neuropsychological battery across ethno-racial, linguistic, and cognitive status groups

Congratulations Dr. Melissa Armstrong!

We’re proud to celebrate the publication of her latest paper, “Cognitive Factor Structure of the NACC UDS-3 Neuropsychological Battery Across Ethno-Racial, Linguistic, and Cognitive Status Groups,” in Clinical Neuropsychology.

This important work advances our understanding of how cognitive assessments perform across diverse populations, supporting more equitable and accurate approaches to diagnosing and studying cognitive disorders.

Please join us in congratulating Dr. Armstrong on this significant achievement and contribution to the field of neuropsychology!

Abstract

Objective 

There are diagnostic disparities in dementia across ethno-racial communities. The potential contribution of measurement bias in cognitive assessments was investigated by examining the factor structure and measurement invariance of the Uniform Data Set neuropsychological battery (UDS3-NB) across ethno-racial groups as well as Spanish and English speakers along a cognitive continuum. 

Methods

Data were from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center (NACC) and the 1Florida Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (1FLADRC). Confirmatory factor analyses were conducted in NACC (n = 29,462; M age = 71.0, SD = 10.4; 58.5% female, M education = 15.8, SD = 3.0; 68.6% non-Hispanic White, 5.3% -primary Spanish speaking) to determine the UDS3-NB factor structure. Measurement invariance was tested in NACC and separately within 1FLADRC (n = 829; M age = 69.9, SD = 8.5; 56.5% female; M education = 14.6, SD = 3.5 years; 33.3% non-Hispanic White, 33.8% primary Spanish speaking), across ethno-racial (non-Hispanic White, Hispanic White, Black/African American), primary language (English, Spanish), and cognitive status (cognitively normal, mild cognitive impairment, dementia). Invariance was assessed at configural, metric, scalar, and strict levels. 

Results

 A 4-factor model (memory, processing speed/executive functioning, language, attention) demonstrated acceptable to good fit in NACC (CFI = 0.97, TLI = 0.96, RMSEA = 0.07, SRMR = 0.03) and 1FLADRC (CFI = 0.97, TLI = 0.96, RMSEA = 0.05, SRMR = 0.04). Standardized factor loadings ranged from 0.43-0.87. Metric invariance was supported across all contrasts in both cohorts. Higher levels of invariance were cohort-dependent: CN vs. MCI achieved strict invariance in both cohorts, whereas non-Hispanic White vs. Hispanic White and English vs. Spanish only achieved strict invariance in NACC. 

Conclusions

The UDS3-NB demonstrates structural validity and metric equivalence across ethno-racial, linguistic, and cognitive status groups.