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Components of analogical reasoning in a mildly head injured population
Authors:Elaine Clark   Michael K. Gardner   Gail Brown  Linda Gummow
Affiliation:(1) Holy Cross Hospital, USA;(2) Department of Educational Psychology, University of Utah, 327 Milton Bennion Hall, 84112 Salt Lake City, UT
Abstract:
This study sought to investigate the effects of mild head injury on a particular type of cognitive ability, verbal analogical reasoning. The performance of 19 individuals with head injuries was compared to a group of 30 control subjects matched for age, education, and gender on 100 verbal analogies. Solution times and error rates were modeled. Unstandardized regression weights for individual subjects were correlated with subjects’ performance on a number of standardized ability tests. Results showed that compared to the control subjects, the head injured subjects: (a) were significantly slower to solve the analogies, and were particularly slow to perform certain processes: encoding/inference and comparison; (b) tended to show greater variability in performance; and (c) had data that had a poorer componential model fit. The data suggest that analogical reasoning is affected by a head injury, and that certain information processes may be responsible for performance deficits.
Keywords:
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