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A psychometric study of an executive function assessment instrument (TDI-FE)

This study aims to present and discuss the psychometric properties of executive functions, which were measured using the TDI-FE instrument. The analysis encompasses its internal structure, potential sensitivity to fatigue factors, relationships with external criteria, and diagnostic accuracy. The st...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:BMC Psychology 2023-10, Vol.11 (1), p.1-336, Article 336
Main Authors: Kato, Sérgio Kakuta, Machado, Flávia Amaral, Paganella, Machline Paim, Gurgel, Leia Gonçalves, Kaiser, Vanessa, Diaz, Gabriela Bertoletti, Serafini, Adriana Jung, Filho, Nelson Hauck, Reppold, Caroline Tozzi
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Language:English
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Summary:This study aims to present and discuss the psychometric properties of executive functions, which were measured using the TDI-FE instrument. The analysis encompasses its internal structure, potential sensitivity to fatigue factors, relationships with external criteria, and diagnostic accuracy. The study sample comprised 382 students from Brazil, aged 6-8 years. Child development variables were screened using the TDI-FE and gold standard tests (Cancellation Attention and Trail Making Tests). The proposed scale comprised four activities: a test with fruit images with three tasks, and one memory game. The one-factor model of EF of the TDI-FE failed to fit to the data. However, fit substantially improved once a latent fatigue factor was controlled in the model. The latent factor of EF assessed by the TDI-FE tasks was coherently associated with a series of external variables, including two popular collateral measures of EF. The diagnostic accuracy was reasonable, and a cut-off of 37 points produced 70% of sensitivity and 60% of specificity.
ISSN:2050-7283
2050-7283
DOI:10.1186/s40359-023-01373-2