Authors
Laura A Rabin, Colette M Smart, Paul K Crane, Rebecca E Amariglio, Lorin M Berman, Mercé Boada, Rachel F Buckley, Gaël Chételat, Bruno Dubois, Kathryn A Ellis, Katherine A Gifford, Angela L Jefferson, Frank Jessen, Mindy J Katz, Richard B Lipton, Tobias Luck, Paul Maruff, Michelle M Mielke, José Luis Molinuevo, Farnia Naeem, Audrey Perrotin, Ronald C Petersen, Lorena Rami, Barry Reisberg, Dorene M Rentz, Steffi G Riedel-Heller, Shannon L Risacher, Octavio Rodriguez, Perminder S Sachdev, Andrew J Saykin, Melissa J Slavin, Beth E Snitz, Reisa A Sperling, Caroline Tandetnik, Wiesje M Van Der Flier, Michael Wagner, Steffen Wolfsgruber, Sietske AM Sikkes, Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative
Publication date
2015/1/1
Source
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
Volume
48
Issue
s1
Pages
S63-S86
Publisher
IOS Press
Description
Research increasingly suggests that subjective cognitive decline (SCD) in older adults, in the absence of objective cognitive dysfunction or depression, may be a harbinger of non-normative cognitive decline and eventual progression to dementia. Little is known, however, about the key features of self-report measures currently used to assess SCD. The Subjective Cognitive Decline Initiative (SCD-I) Working Group is an international consortium established to develop a conceptual framework and research criteria for SCD (Jessen et al., 2014, Alzheimers Dement 10, 844–852). In the current study we systematically compared cognitive self-report items used by 19 SCD-I Working Group studies, representing 8 countries and 5 languages. We identified 34 self-report measures comprising 640 cognitive self-report items. There was little overlap among measures—approximately 75% of measures were used by only one …
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