Generalizability of WISC-IV index and subtest score profiles in children with traumatic brain injury |
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Authors: | Christopher Rackley Daniel N. Allen Laura J. Fuhrman Joan Mayfield |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychiatry/Psychology , Blythedale Children's Hospital , Valhalla , New York , USA Christopherr@blythedale.org;3. Department of Psychology , University of Nevada Las Vegas , Las Vegas , Nevada , USA;4. Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology , Bronx , New York , USA;5. Our Children's House at Baylor , Dallas , Texas , USA |
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Abstract: | The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, 4th edition (WISC-IV) is often used to assess children with traumatic brain injury (TBI); although limited information is available regarding its psychometric properties in these children. Two recent reports suggest that the Perceptual Reasoning Index is not uniquely sensitive to TBI, which differs from the Perceptual Organization Index of the WISC-III. The current study examined WISC-IV profiles in two independently gathered samples of children with TBI. Examination of profiles indicated similarities between the current findings and those reported in other studies, in that the greatest deficits were present on the Processing Speed Index and its component subtests of Coding and Symbol Search, while the Perceptual Reasoning index score was comparable to the Verbal Comprehension Index. Also, no significant index or subtest score differences were present when the current sample was compared to the children with TBI reported by Allen, Thaler, Donohue and Mayfield (2010 Allen, D. N., Thaler, N. S., Donohue, B. and Mayfield, J. 2010. WISC-IV profiles in children with traumatic brain injury: Similarities to and differences from the WISC-III. Psychological Assessment, 22(1): 57–64. [Crossref], [PubMed], [Web of Science ®] , [Google Scholar]). The present findings are consistent with two prior studies of the WISC-IV in children with TBI, providing additional evidence for profile differences between the WISC-III and WISC-IV. The results also suggest that WISC-IV profiles reported in prior studies are generalizable across TBI samples and study sites. |
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Keywords: | WISC-IV Traumatic brain injury Processing speed index Children Assessment Neuropsychology |
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