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34 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
- 3rd side (hint)
WISC-IV
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Cognitive assessment
Five broad domains: verbal, perceptual, memory, processing speed and executive function Ages 6-16:11 |
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WPPSI
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2:6 - 7:3
Cognitive assessment |
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WIAT-II
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Achievement assessment
Ages 4 - 85 years. |
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Measures of Social Skills, Development and Adaptive Behavior
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Vineland II
Adaptive Behavior Assessment System (ABAS) II |
Two
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Vineland II
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Survey Interview Form, Parent/Caregiver Rating Form,
Expanded Interview Form—0 through 90; Teacher Rating Form—3 through 21-11 Standard scores (M = 100, SD = 15), Pearson Instrument |
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Adaptive Behavior Assessment System II
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Get a complete assessment of adaptive skills functioning
Ages / Grades 0-89 Norms Age-based Forms 5 Forms: Parent Form, Birth-5; Parent Form, 5-21; Teacher/Day Care Form, 2-5; Teacher Form, 5-21; Adult Form, 16-89 Pearson instrument |
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Measures of Social/Emotional functioning and Behavior
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BASC-II
MMPI APS Connors Becks |
Five
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Behavior Assessment System for Children - II
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Teacher Rating Scales (TRS),
Parent Rating Scales (PRS), Self-Report of Personality (SRP) Student Observation System (SOS) Structured Developmental History (SDH). Ages 2:0 through 21:11 (TRS and PRS); 6:0 through college age (SRP) Pearson |
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Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory -2-RF
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Can be used with court involved youth.
Over 300 items. Pearson |
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Adolescent Psychopathology Scale
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Evaluate the presence and severity of symptoms of psychological disorders and distress in ages 12-19 years
Clinical Disorders (20 scales), Personality Disorders (5 scales), and Psychosocial Problem Content areas (11 scales). The Response Style Indicator scales (4 scales) includes indexes of response consistency, response veracity, and unusual endorsement propensities. Table 1 illustrates the relationship between APS scales and the internalizing-externalizing disorders. Over 300 items. PAR |
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Connors-R (CSR-R)
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ADHD measure
Administer To Parents and teachers of children and adolescents ages 3–17 and adolescent self-report ages 12–17 Reading Level 6th–9th grade (varieswith version) Scales include: Oppositional Cognitive Problems/Inattention Hyperactivity Anxious-Shy Perfectionism Social Problems Psychosomatic Conners’ Global Index DSM-IV Symptom Subscales ADHD Index Long and Short version Pearson |
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Becks (BDI-II)
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Asesses depression
Ages 13 through 80 years English and Spanish versions |
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Measures of Academic Achievement
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Woodcock-Johnson-III
WIAT-II |
Two
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Wechsler Individual Achievement Test - Second Edition (WIAT-II)
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Ages/Grades : 4 to 85 years/PreK-16
conormed with WISC/WAIS/WPPSI Pearson |
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Woodcock-Johnson -III - Achievment
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Ages: 2 to 90+ years
Riverside |
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Woodcock-Johnson -III - Cognitive
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Ages: 2 to 90+ years
Riverside |
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Measures of Intellectual and Cognitive Function
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Weschler measures (WISC, WPPSI, WAIS)
Woodcock-Johnson-III Cognitive Assesment System (CAS) Differential Abilities System (DAS) Stanford Binet - V UNIT KTEA KBIT-2 |
Eight
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Uses of Neuropsychological Assessments
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-Describing and identifying changes in psychological function
-Determining the biological correlates of test results -Determining whether changes are associated with neurological disease, psychiatric conditions, developmental disorders, or nonneurological conditions -Assessing changes over time and developing a prognosis -Offering guidelines for rehabilitation, vocational and/or educational planning -Providing guidelines and education to family and caregivers. -Planning for discharge and treatment implementations |
Seven points
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Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological Battery (HRB)
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a fixed set of eight tests used to evaluate brain and nervous system functioning in individuals aged 15 years and older. Children's versions are the Halstead Neuropsychological Test Battery for Older Children (ages nine to 14) and the Reitan Indiana Neuropsychological Test Battery (ages five to eight).
Assesses for brain damage |
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Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery (LNNB)
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appropriate for people aged 13 and older and takes between 90 and 150 minutes to complete. It consists of 269 items in the following 11 clinical scales:
reading writing arithmetic visual memory expressive language receptive language motor function rhythm tactile intellectual Scores for three summary scales can also be calculated: pathognomonic, right hemisphere, and left hemisphere. A children's version of the battery, called the Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery for Children (LNNB-C), appropriate for children aged eight to 12, is also available. |
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Boston Process Approach (BPA)
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examines the process by which the patient solves a problem rather than simply looking at the patient's numerical scores. The Boston Process also tailors which tests to give a patient instead of administering an entire test battery to every subject, regardless of their condition.
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Z-Score
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A z-score is an individual score from a population that has been standardized by subtracting the mean and dividing by the SD of the population.
A z-score of 0 = the mean of the population, a z-score of -1 is 1 SD below the mean, and a z-score of 2.3 is 2.3 SD above the mean. |
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Standard Deviation
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Square root of the variance of a sample or population, most commonly used to measure the variability of a distribution.
Measuring the typical (standard) difference (deviation) from the mean sample or population. |
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T-Scores
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Mean of 50, SD of 10.
A t-score of 65 is above average, and 1.5 SD above the mean. |
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Percentile
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Percentage of people who score at or below the given percentile score given on the test.
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Standard Scores v. Raw Scores
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SS are computed based on age and subtest for most standardized measures.
Raw scores are used to compute SS, but vary based on age/level. SS are used because they can be more easily computed into IQ ranges, and are easier to understand in comparision to one another. (A low raw score may not compute to a low SS, which would impact the over all indecies or FSIQ scores) |
Whats the difference? Why do we report one, or the other?
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Effect Size
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Measure of the impact of the experimental manipulations.
Used to measure the effect of an intervention. |
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Reliability
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Similar results over time
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Validity
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Measures what is claims to measure
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Four types
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Type I errors
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Rejecting a null hypothesis when it is true
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Type II errors
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Accepting a null hypothesis when it is false.
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Correlation
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Measures the relationship between two variables.
Correlation = Sum of ZsubX times ZsubY, over N |
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Power
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Usually means increasing number and types of participants.
Increase reliability and validity. |
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Kaufman Brief Intelligence Test, Second Edition (KBIT-2)
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Ages: 4 through 90
Administration Time: approximately 20 minutes Scores/Interpretation: Crystallized (Verbal), Fluid (Nonverbal), IQ Composite: Standard scores (M = 100, SD = 15) and percentile ranks by age< Authors: Alan S. Kaufman & Nadeen L. Kaufman Another fine Pearson product. |
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