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      The CVLT was expanded to younger ages with the publication of the CVLT-C. It not only extended the age downward to 5, it also modified the content to be more relevant for children. The word list was shortened to 15 words derived from three semantic categories. The semantic categories reflect categories common in childhood. Two of these categories overlap with the semantic categories contained in the adult forms. Similar to the administration of the original CVLT, the child is read the list of 15 words across five learning trials, followed by an interference list trial. Just as in the original CVLT, the lists are presented as Monday and Tuesday shopping lists. Following the interference trial, the child recalls the original list in both short-delay free- and cued-recall trials. The examiner then completes nonverbal testing for 20 min before administering long-delay free- and cued-recall trials, as well as a delayed recognition trial (see Figure 1.1). All trials are required to derive the primary scores. Scores derived on the CVLT-C assess auditory attention, learning strategies and characteristics, recall accuracy and consistency, proactive and retroactive interference, recall errors, and recognition.

       Rapid Reference 1.1

      Primary Scores Derived in CVLT-C, by Condition

Learning trials Recall scores Recognition scores
Trial 1 Free-Recall CorrectTrial 5 Free-Recall CorrectTotal Trials 1–5 (T score) List B Free-Recall Trial List B Recall vs. List A Trial 1 Recall (difference score) Semantic Cluster Ratio Serial Cluster Ratio Expected Serial Clustering Percent of Total Recall from Primacy Region Percent of Total Recall from Middle Region Percent of Total Recall from Recency Region Learning Slope Recall Consistency Short-Delay Free RecallShort-Delay Cued RecallShort-Delay Free Recall vs. List A Trial 5 (difference score)Long-Delay Free RecallLong-Delay Cued RecallLong-Delay Free Recall vs. Short-Delay Free Recall (difference score)Total PerseverationsTotal Free-Recall IntrusionsTotal Cued-Recall IntrusionsTotal Intrusions Recognition HitsDiscriminabilityDiscriminability vs. Long-Delay Free RecallFalse PositivesResponse Bias

      Difference scores compare performance on one task to performance on another task. On CVLT-C, difference scores are derived using two methods (see Chapter 3 for detailed information on calculating the change scores): raw percentage change and scaled score difference. The raw percentage change scores are not normed due to the heavy influence of the raw scores on the calculation of percentage retained, such that low overall recall can result in higher retention percentages. Difference (or savings) scores utilize the age-corrected scaled scores. Means and standard deviations for the normative sample are provided to provide context for these scores. Change and difference scores should not replace the primary scores but are used to guide the interpretation of differences observed across conditions. Detailed information on the interpretation of scores is provided in Chapter 4.

      The development of the CVLT-II incorporated analysis of the performance of each score to evaluate the influence of demographic variables and general cognitive ability on performance, reliability and stability, score range and distribution for floor and ceiling problems, and clinical utility. Norms are corrected for age and sex because these demographic factors contributed more than 5% of the variance in primary scores. Detailed information on the psychometric properties and the clinical utility of the CVLT-II are described in the CVLT-II Manual (Delis, Kramer, Kaplan, & Ober, 2000).

      Just as on the original CVLT, for the Standard and Alternate Forms, the examinee is read a list of 16 words across five learning trials, followed by an interference list trial. Following the interference trial, the examinee recalls the original list in both free-recall and cued-recall trials. The examiner then completes nonverbal testing for 20 min before administering delayed free-recall and cued-recall trials, as well as a delayed yes/no recognition trial. The examiner may then administer an optional forced-choice recognition trial following a 10-min delay (see Figure 1.2). All trials except the forced-choice recognition trial are required to derive the primary scores. It is highly recommended that examiners routinely administer the forced-choice recognition condition to assess performance validity.

Learning trials 30-second distractor task Short-delay Long-delay (follows 10-min delay) Yes/No recognition Forced-choice recognition (follows a 5-min delay)
Trial 1 Free RecallTrial 2 Free RecallTrial 3 Free RecallTrial 4 Free

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