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Processing%20Speed%20Index%20of%20the%20Wechsler%20Intelligence%20Scale%20for%20Children-IV
Availability
Please visit these websites for more information about the instrument:
Classification
Basic: Acute, Moderate and Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Supplemental: Epilepsy (0-5 years): WPPSI-III, Epilepsy (6-16 years): WISC-IV, Epidemiology TBI
Short Description of Instrument
Administration: Individual, face-to-face, paper-and-pencil, or web-based; requires training to administer.
Completion Time: 60-90 minutes (WISC-IV); Ages 2:6–3:11, 30–45 minutes; Ages 4:0–7:3,
45–60 minutes (WPPSI-III)
Scores: FSIQ, Index Scores (Verbal Comprehension, Perceptual Reasoning, Working Memory, Processing Speed), and Subtest Scaled Scores. The Index Scores can be used to examine specific areas of cognitive impairment/strength/preservation.
 
Scoring Options: Scoring Assistant® software, Report Writer™ software, or hand scoring
Report Options: Score, Client, and Interpretive.
 
Software Available: Yes
 
Publication Date: WISC-IV was published in 2003 and WISC-V revision available in Fall 2014. WPPSI-III was published in 2002; WPPSI-IV was published in 2012
 
Ages / Grades: Children 6:0–16:11 (WISC-IV); 2 years, 6 months –7 years, 7 months (WPPSI-III)
 
Norms: Scaled Scores by age, Index Scores, Full-Scale IQ
 
Psychometric Properties: See link below for specific data; Wechsler tests are the most widely used, "gold standard" instrument for testing intellectual functioning
 
Rationale/Justification
There is a Wechsler test covering every age group and therefore could be useful in longitudinal studies and studies comparing patients across age groups. The updated WISC-V is more analogous to the most recent update of the WAIS-IV (adult version of the Wechsler Test), making longitudinal comparison easier.
 
The Wechsler scales are the most common tests of general cognitive abilities. The primary advantage of the WPPSI-III includes the comprehensiveness of the assessment, which includes measures of working memory and processing speed in addition to verbal and non-verbal measures. Thus, normative performances on domain-specific WPPSI-III subtests can be characterized relative to each other based upon formal difference scores derived from WPPSI-III normative sample. In addition, the tests and scale itself is a downward extension of the WISC, which is a CDE for older children.
 
Thus, using tests in the same family facilitates longer term longitudinal studies in which children may cross age thresholds for test administration.
 
There is no formal short form of the WPPSI-III. Researchers wishing a use short form may generate FSIQ estimates derived from either 2-subtest (Vocabulary, Matrix Reasoning) or 4-subtest (Vocabulary, Similarities, Block Design, Matrix Reasoning) combinations. This test selection corresponds to the 2- and 4-subtest combinations for the WASI. There is no Spanish version of the test.
References
Wechsler related bibliography across study populations:
 
WPPSI-IV validity studies with various diagnostic groups: Pearson Clinical Website

 

Document last updated July 2019