Skip to main content

Tools to convert BICAMS scores to z scores in a Belgian (Dutch) population

Project description

BICAMSZ: a package for z-transformation of BICAMS for a Belgian (Dutch) population

Table of contents

  1. About the creators
  2. Project explanation
  3. Considerations
  4. Deliverables
  5. Required Data
  6. Code explanation

Introduction

AIMS - VUB

First of all, thank you very much for your interest in using our project on behalf of the Artificial Intelligence and Modelling in clinical Sciences (AIMS) lab, part of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB). We aim to contribute maximally to optimal clinical care in neurodegenerative disorders, with a special focus on Multiple Sclerosis, by performing relevant and advanced modelling on neurophysiological and brain imaging data. Moreover, in light of the prosper of the field and general understanding of our research, we do efforts to contribute to open, reproducible and transparant science by sharing code and actively practicing science communication on our AIMS website.

The project

This project is based on Costers et al. 2017.
To understand the transformation, please visit our streamlit application!

In short, transforming test scores to z-scores by correcting for age, sex and education allows comparison of cognitive scores between subjects. The following phases can be distinguished:

  1. Scaling of the raw scores
  2. Predicting which score should normally be obtained by the subject according to their age, sex and education level.
  3. Obtain z-score: subtract the predicted score (2) from the scaled score (1), and divide by the residual error of the regression model

Important considerations

Both the conversion table per test, used for the scaling of raw scores, and the fitting of the regression-line to yield the weights for the features within the regression model (age, age^2, sex, education level) rely on data from a sample of 97 Belgian, Dutch-speaking healthy controls. The demographics of this population (especially age and education, 43.52 ± 12.69 and 14.69 ± 1.61 (mean ± std) respectively) should be taken into account when converting a z-score for a subject. We highlight to be especially careful when calculating z-scores when a participant's characteristics have extreme values (either very low or very high) on either age or education level.

Furthermore, testing conditions for this paper were very strict. E.g. for the SDMT, patients were not allowed to keep track of their progression on the test paper by using their fingers to indicate the symbol that needed to be converted into a digit. Please make sure that every subtest of BICAMS was administered with careful attention for correct execution. Moreover, only the Dutch version of CVLT-II is eligible for the z-normalization within this project.

Deliverables

With this code, you can easily transform cognitive scores on BICAMS to z-scores.

Required data

The following data is an absolute requirement:

  • age: years (integer)
  • sex:
    • 1 = Male
    • 2 = Female
  • education (years of education):
    • 6 = Primary school
    • 12 = High school
    • 13 = Professional education
    • 15 = Bachelor
    • 17 = Master
    • 21 = Doctorate

Furthermore, data on at least 1 of the 3 scores below is required:

  • sdmt: raw sdmt score
  • bvmt: raw bvmt score
  • cvlt: raw cvlt score

Code explanation

All code is present in functions.py

  • data_check: performs a check on your data for impossible values, including NaNs. If problems are still present, the code will automatically throw warnings and return NaNs.
  • normalization_pipeline: entire pipeline. Uses the following internal functions:
    • _check_impossible_values_or_nans
    • _get_conversion_table: more info below
    • _get_expected_score
    • _raw_to_scaled
    • _to_z_score
    • _impaired_or_not
  • pipeline_for_pandas: this allows the pipeline to be applied to a pandas dataframe with the .apply() function. Please use the following code snippets:
    1. new_columns = ['z_test', 'imp_test']: replace 'test' with the test you are converting
    2. input_columns = ['column_name_age', 'column_name_sex', 'column_name_edu', 'column_name_test']: Adapt the names according to your columnnames.
    3. df[new_columns] = df[input_columns].apply(pipeline_for_pandas, args = (test, z_cutoff), axis = 1): replace test with the string 'sdmt', 'bvmt' or 'cvlt'. Also choose the cut-off.

To load the three main functions: from BICAMSZ import normalization_pipeline, data_check, pipeline_for_pandas
For info on these functions: please use help(...function...) to see the docstrings.

Code examples:

from BICAMSZ import normalization_pipeline, data_check, pipeline_for_pandas
import pandas as pd

data_dict = {'age': [55,70,34,80],
             'sex': [1,2,2,1],
             'education': [17, 6, 13, 21],
             'sdmt': [32, 49, 81, 70],
             'bvmt': [25, 36, 30, 12],
             'cvlt': [41, 22, 75, 60]}
df = pd.DataFrame(data_dict)

# 0. Check if your data is ready for conversion, per column. For example:
data_check(df['sdmt'], 'sdmt')  

# 1. Using normalization_pipeline per case
z_score, impairment_bool = normalization_pipeline(70, 2, 13, 53, 'sdmt', -1.5)

# 2. Using pipeline_for_pandas to immediately convert entire dataframe
new_columns_sdmt = ['z_sdmt', 'imp_sdmt']
new_columns_bvmt = ['z_bvmt', 'imp_bvmt']
new_columns_cvlt = ['z_cvlt', 'imp_cvlt']
input_columns_sdmt = ['age', 'sex', 'education', 'sdmt']
input_columns_bvmt = ['age', 'sex', 'education', 'bvmt']
input_columns_cvlt = ['age', 'sex', 'education', 'cvlt']

df[new_columns_sdmt] = df[input_columns_sdmt].apply(pipeline_for_pandas, args=('sdmt', -1.5), axis=1)
df[new_columns_bvmt] = df[input_columns_bvmt].apply(pipeline_for_pandas, args=('bvmt', -1.5), axis=1)
df[new_columns_cvlt] = df[input_columns_cvlt].apply(pipeline_for_pandas, args=('cvlt', -1.5), axis=1)

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

BICAMSZ-1.0.3.tar.gz (7.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

BICAMSZ-1.0.3-py3-none-any.whl (7.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file BICAMSZ-1.0.3.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: BICAMSZ-1.0.3.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 7.3 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.1.1 CPython/3.11.2

File hashes

Hashes for BICAMSZ-1.0.3.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 0067568c5f0b42bb673708afbb7d18bca5e2414925d6e8d118edd6648235f279
MD5 cddd5bac0d7e8006a26aeea46da00484
BLAKE2b-256 24617a8831977b341c5bea3f8a52526e92b1ba8146642b91d9dbc9537797ec13

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file BICAMSZ-1.0.3-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: BICAMSZ-1.0.3-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 7.8 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.1.1 CPython/3.11.2

File hashes

Hashes for BICAMSZ-1.0.3-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 0f0b16e85c85f650b5c4c81e0f45b92fae06dd2a11aa7c5cecd856a96357cff3
MD5 fa701829a27119b522cbc26f9d09b53f
BLAKE2b-256 e2debeb38fccf9819cbf7e0e0e756f3af5fca491305c47c65d9b68fea6a07a56

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page