Abstract: | Twenty-four young children with autism were assessed with the Fourth Edition of the Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale as part of the routine assessment procedure at the Douglass Developmental Disabilities Center. Inspection of the pattern of their responses yielded an distinctive profile with the subscale of Absurdities being consistently the lowest and Pattern Analysis the highest subtest. Comparisons of the profiles for the subjects with the highest and lowest overall IQs showed essentially the same profile patterns. These data are consistent with what we know about autism as a disorder and provide support for the notion that traditional psychometric assessment can be useful in evaluating children with autism. |