The Telephone Language Screener (TLS): standardization of a novel telephone-based screening test for language impairment
- Open Access
- 27-11-2023
- Aphasia
- Original Article
- Authors
- Edoardo Nicolò Aiello
- Veronica Pucci
- Lorenzo Diana
- Alessia Corvaglia
- Aida Niang
- Silvia Mattiello
- Alice Naomi Preti
- Giorgia Durante
- Adele Ravelli
- Lucia Consonni
- Carolina Guerra
- Adriana Delli Ponti
- Gaia Sangalli
- Teresa Difonzo
- Stefano Scarano
- Laura Perucca
- Stefano Zago
- Ildebrando Appollonio
- Sara Mondini
- Nadia Bolognini
- Published in
- Neurological Sciences | Issue 5/2024
Abstract
Background
This study aimed at developing and standardizing the Telephone Language Screener (TLS), a novel, disease-nonspecific, telephone-based screening test for language disorders.
Methods
The TLS was developed in strict pursuance to the current psycholinguistic standards. It comprises nine tasks assessing phonological, lexical-semantic and morpho-syntactic components, as well as an extra Backward Digit Span task. The TLS was administered to 480 healthy participants (HPs), along with the Telephone-based Semantic Verbal Fluency (t-SVF) test and a Telephone-based Composite Language Index (TBCLI), as well as to 37 cerebrovascular/neurodegenerative patients—who also underwent the language subscale of the Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS-L). An HP subsample was also administered an in-person language battery. Construct validity, factorial structure, internal consistency, test–retest and inter-rater reliability were tested. Norms were derived via Equivalent Scores. The capability of the TLS to discriminate patients from HPs and to identify, among the patient cohort, those with a defective TICS-L, was also examined.
Results
The TLS was underpinned by a mono-component structure and converged with the t-SVF (p < .001), the TBCLI (p < .001) and the in-person language battery (p = .002). It was internally consistent (McDonald’s ω = 0.67) and reliable between raters (ICC = 0.99) and at retest (ICC = 0.83). Age and education, but not sex, were predictors of TLS scores. The TLS optimally discriminated patients from HPs (AUC = 0.80) and successfully identified patients with an impaired TICS-L (AUC = 0.92). In patients, the TLS converged with TICS-L scores (p = 0.016).
Discussion
The TLS is a valid, reliable, normed and clinically feasible telephone-based screener for language impairment.
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- Title
- The Telephone Language Screener (TLS): standardization of a novel telephone-based screening test for language impairment
- Authors
-
Edoardo Nicolò Aiello
Veronica Pucci
Lorenzo Diana
Alessia Corvaglia
Aida Niang
Silvia Mattiello
Alice Naomi Preti
Giorgia Durante
Adele Ravelli
Lucia Consonni
Carolina Guerra
Adriana Delli Ponti
Gaia Sangalli
Teresa Difonzo
Stefano Scarano
Laura Perucca
Stefano Zago
Ildebrando Appollonio
Sara Mondini
Nadia Bolognini
- Publication date
- 27-11-2023
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Keyword
- Aphasia
- Published in
-
Neurological Sciences / Issue 5/2024
Print ISSN: 1590-1874
Electronic ISSN: 1590-3478 - DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10072-023-07149-1
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