Previous research has indicated that performance on verbal fluency
tests (VFTs) is influenced by language and/or culture. Consequently,
normative VFT data for English-speaking people cannot be used for people
for whom English is not their first language. The aim of the present study
was to provide normative data for the Animal Naming, Profession Naming,
and Letter M Naming (four-letter words beginning with the letter
M) VFTs for Dutch-speaking populations, based on a large sample
(N = 1856) of healthy men and women aged 24–81 years of
different educational levels. The results showed that age affected the
performance of all VFTs profoundly, but the age effect was not uniform: in
the Profession and Letter M Naming VFTs, performance was stable
in young adulthood but declined strongly after age 50. In contrast, in the
Animal Naming VFT, performance appeared to decline linearly, starting
early in life. Furthermore, males had higher scores than females on the
Profession Naming VFT, and higher educated participants outperformed their
lower educated counterparts on all three VFTs. Regression-based normative
data were prepared for the 3 VFTs, and the advantages of using a
regression-based normative approach instead of a traditional normative
approach are discussed. (JINS, 2006, 12,
80–89.)