Research
Definitions
Intellectual Disabilities
Longitudinal Studies
Intelligence Tests
100

designed by David Weschsler

What is WAIS research?

100

A mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations

What is intelligence?
100

a physical cause of an intellectual disbility

What is Down Syndrome?

100

the group of people studied over a period of years

what is a cohort?

100

a method for assessing an individual's mental aptitudes and comparing them with those  of others, using numerical scores

What is an intelligence test?

200

type of verbal intelligence the cross-sectional method showed declining scores with age.

What is inductive reasoning?

200

following and retesting the same people over time 

What are longitudinal studies?

200

A condition of mild to severe disability caused by an extra copy of chromosome 21

What is Down Syndrome?

200

An example of a longitudinal study is...

a) Researchers randomly select 50 students from a high school with 2000 students. The 50 students are given intelligence tests.

b) A group of kindergartners is given an intelligence test and are retested every other year for 30 years.

What is B?

200

Exams covering what you have learned in this course

What is an achievement test?

300

comparing people from large families to people with small families mental abilities

What is an example of a cross-sectional study?

300
Humans' ability to reason speedily and abstractly that decreases with age 

What is fluid intelligence?

300

Low verbal comprehension scores on the WAIS test, while scoring high in other area indicates this type of disability

What is a reading or learning disability?

300

A type of research on aging that showed a slight increase in intelligence scores as the people went into adulthood

What is the longitudinal method?

300

A college entrance exam which seeks to predict your ability to do college work. 

What is an aptitude test?
400
A consideration when conducting cross-sectional studies

(Ex) 

What are less educated people (older) with better-educated ones (younger)?


400

Accumulating knowledge and verbal skills with age 

What is crystallized intelligence?

400
Two conditions that must be met in order to be diagnosed with an intellectual disability?

What is a low IQ test score?

What is a difficulty adapting to independence?

400

Something that should be considered when conducting longitudinal studies

What are confounding variables? 

(could affect the presence of members of the sample population at various points while conducting research)

400

it is the test that David Wechsler designed which its subtests are recognizing similarities such as vocabulary, letter-number sequence, and block designs 

What is a WAIS test?

500

the conclusion that “the decline of mental ability with age is part of the general [aging] process of the organism as a whole.”

What are David Wechsler's cross-sectional WAIS results?

500

Comparing people of different ages at the same point in time

What are cross-sectional studies?

500

Name two out of three more criteria for an intellectual disability?

What is limited conceptual skills?

What is limited social skills?

What is limited practical skills?

500
A benefit to using a longitudinal study instead of a cross-sectional study 

What is tracing the evolution of traits over a longer period of time?

500

Something that is measured by every task on an intelligence test

What is "g"?

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