The Oxford Cognitive Screen – Plus (OCS-Plus): a tablet based short cognitive screening tool for milder cognitive impairment.
Citation
Nele Demeyere, Marleen Haupt, Sam Webb, Lea Strobel, Elise Milosevich, Margaret J Moore, Hayley Wright, Kathrin Finke, Mihaela Duta. The Oxford Cognitive Screen – Plus (OCS-Plus): a tablet based short cognitive screening tool for milder cognitive impairment.
Abstract
The Oxford Cognitive Screen was developed as a brief screening tool for common
post-stroke focal cognitive deficits, including language, memory, attention, praxis, and
number-processing impairments. Here, we present the OCS-Plus, a computerised tablet-based
screen designed to briefly assess domain-general cognition and provide more fine-grained
measures of memory and executive function. The OCS-Plus was designed to sensitively
screen for subtle cognitive impairments and differentiate between memory and non-memory
deficits.
The OCS-Plus contains 10 subtasks and requires approximately 30 minutes to
complete. In this study, 320 neurologically healthy ageing participants (age M=62.66,
SD=13.75) from three sites completed the OCS-Plus to provide a normative sample. The
convergent validity of this assessment was established in comparison to the ACE-R, CERAD
and Rey-Osterrieth. Divergent validity was established through comparison with the BDI.
Internal consistency of each subtask was evaluated and test-retest reliability was determined.
We established the normative impairment cut-offs for each of the subtests. Predicted
convergent and divergent validity was found as well as strong test-retest reliability, which
provided evidence of test stability. Further research demonstrating the use and validity of the
OCS-Plus in various clinical populations is required.
The OCS-Plus is a standardised cognitive screening tool, normed and validated in a
large sample of neurologically healthy participants. The OCS-Plus is available as an Android
App and provides an automated report of domain-general cognitive impairments in executive
attention and memory.