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Factor structure of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children–Fifth Edition: Exploratory factor analyses with the 16 primary and secondary subtests.
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Citations
68
References
2015
Year
EducationCognitionPsychometricsSocial SciencesPsychologyIntellectual ImpairmentChildren–fifth EditionMathematical CognitionCognitive DevelopmentFactor AnalysisChild AssessmentPsychological EvaluationFactor StructureCognitive FactorLatent Variable MethodsWechsler Intelligence ScaleChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceCognitive Variable5-Factor ModelExperimental PsychologyChild DevelopmentPediatricsIntelligence AnalysisSocial IntelligenceFactor Extraction CriteriaPsychological Measurement
The factor structure of the 16 Primary and Secondary subtests of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Fifth Edition (WISC-V; Wechsler, 2014a) standardization sample was examined with exploratory factor analytic methods (EFA) not included in the WISC-V Technical and Interpretive Manual (Wechsler, 2014b). Factor extraction criteria suggested 1 to 4 factors and results favored 4 first-order factors. When this structure was transformed with the Schmid and Leiman (1957) orthogonalization procedure, the hierarchical g-factor accounted for large portions of total and common variance while the 4 first-order factors accounted for small portions of total and common variance; rendering interpretation at the factor index level less appropriate. Although the publisher favored a 5-factor model where the Perceptual Reasoning factor was split into separate Visual Spatial and Fluid Reasoning dimensions, no evidence for 5 factors was found. It was concluded that the WISC-V provides strong measurement of general intelligence and clinical interpretation should be primarily, if not exclusively, at that level. (PsycINFO Database Record
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