PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Research uncovers flawed IQ scoring system

Queen's researcher reveals difference in American, Canadian scoring systems

2015-03-17
(Press-News.org) Queen's University professor Allyson Harrison has uncovered anomalies and issues with the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Fourth Edition (WAIS-IV), one of the most widely used intelligence tests in the world. IQ scores are used to predict educational success, to help identify intellectual disabilities or intellectual giftedness and to establish whether a person has a specific learning disability. For her research, Dr. Harrison and her colleagues examined the differences between Canadian and American WAIS-IV scores from 861 postsecondary students from across Ontario. The research identified a trend where the individual's scores were consistently lower using the Canadian test scoring system. The WAIS-IV scores are used to make diagnostic decisions on the person's ability relative to their peer group. "Looking at the normal distribution of scores, you'd expect that only about five per cent of the population should get an IQ score of 75 or less," says Dr. Harrison. "However, while this was true when we scored their tests using the American norms, our findings showed that 21 per cent of college and university students in our sample had an IQ score this low when Canadian norms were used for scoring." The trend was the same across all IQ scores, with Canadian young adults in college or university consistently receiving a lower IQ score if the Canadian norms were used. There were fewer gifted students identified when Canadian norms were used, as well as more students who were said to be intellectually impaired. When scoring the WAIS-IV, Canadian psychologists have the option to compare the obtained raw score with the normative data gathered in either Canada or the USA. Dr. Harrison notes these findings have serious implications for educational and neuropsychological testing. "Research shows that you can go from being classified as average to intellectually impaired based only on whether American or Canadian norms are used to rank the obtained raw IQ score."

INFORMATION:

The research was published in the Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

17 million-year-old whale fossil provides first exact date for East Africa's puzzling uplift

17 million-year-old whale fossil provides first exact date for East Africas puzzling uplift
2015-03-17
Uplift associated with the Great Rift Valley of East Africa and the environmental changes it produced have puzzled scientists for decades because the timing and starting elevation have been poorly constrained. Now paleontologists have tapped a fossil from the most precisely dated beaked whale in the world -- and the only stranded whale ever found so far inland on the African continent -- to pinpoint for the first time a date when East Africa's mysterious elevation began. The 17 million-year-old fossil is from the beaked Ziphiidae whale family. It was discovered 740 ...

Routine clot removal after heart attack not beneficial, may increase risk

2015-03-17
SAN DIEGO (March 16, 2015) -- A technique used to clear blood clots from arteries to the heart in about 20 percent of patients undergoing angioplasty appears to increase the risk of stroke without providing the intended benefit, according to a study presented at the American College of Cardiology's 64th Annual Scientific Session. The new study, which included more than 10,000 patients undergoing angioplasty in response to a severe heart attack, randomly assigned half of the patients to receive angioplasty alone and half to receive angioplasty with manual thrombectomy, ...

Patients 80 years and older would benefit from aggressive treatment

2015-03-17
SAN DIEGO (March 16, 2015) -- Patients over age 80 with acute coronary syndromes would likely benefit from more invasive tests and therapies that may otherwise be denied them due to their age, according to research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 64th Annual Scientific Session in San Diego. The study focused on treatment approaches for older patients with non ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI, a type of heart attack that is milder in the acute phase but has a poor prognosis after six months or more) or the closely-related condition unstable ...

Trial of bivalirudin during angioplasty reports mixed results

2015-03-17
Patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing angioplasty who received the anticoagulant drug bivalirudin did not show significant improvements in either of two co-primary endpoints--a composite of rate of death, heart attack or stroke at 30 days, or a composite of those events plus major bleeding--as compared to patients receiving standard anticoagulation therapy, according to a study presented at the American College of Cardiology's 64th Annual Scientific Session. However, bivalirudin was associated with significantly lower rates of bleeding complications and death, ...

Arm is safer access point than groin for catheter-based heart procedures

2015-03-17
SAN DIEGO (March 16, 2015) -- Patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing coronary angiogram, a procedure used to assess blockages in the heart's arteries, had a significantly lower risk of major bleeding and death if their interventional cardiologist accessed the heart through an artery in the arm rather than the groin, according to research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 64th Annual Scientific Session. Study authors said the results should prompt a re-evaluation of clinical guidelines and that the arm, currently used in a minority of cases in the ...

UNC-Chapel Hill researchers collaborate to develop revolutionary 3-D printing technology

2015-03-17
A 3D printing technology developed by Silicon Valley startup, Carbon3D Inc., enables objects to rise from a liquid media continuously rather than being built layer by layer as they have been for the past 25 years, representing a fundamentally new approach to 3D printing. The technology, to appear as the cover article in the March 20 print issue of Science, allows ready-to-use products to be made 25 to 100 times faster than other methods and creates previously unachievable geometries that open opportunities for innovation not only in health care and medicine, but also in ...

Study reveals previously unknown site of anesthetic action

2015-03-17
Anesthetics have been used in surgical procedures for more than 150 years, but the mechanisms by which inhaled anesthesia actually work are poorly understood. Now, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine have discovered that anesthetics bind to and interfere with certain proteins in excitatory neurons, which are necessary for these neurons to transmit signals involved in anesthesia and the perception of pain. "Our discovery may be an important component of the mechanism of anesthesia and -- because this particular protein is also involved in neuronal development -- could ...

Joint fluid harbors bacterial clumps after replacement despite pre-surgery antibiotics

2015-03-17
PHILADELPHIA, PA - March 17, 2015- Researchers at Thomas Jefferson University and the National Institutes of Health are building on their research which seeks to understand why joint infections persist despite standards of care designed to stop them. More Americans than ever will receive joint replacements, and with an infection rate of approximately 1 percent, the potential exists for tens of thousands to experience post-operative infection and complications each year. "In this study, we decided to find out if pre-operative, prophylactic antibiotic concentrations in ...

Emerging diseases likely to be more harmful in similar species

2015-03-17
When viruses such as influenza and Ebola jump from one species to another, their ability to cause harm can change dramatically, but research from the University of Cambridge shows that it may be possible to predict the virus's virulence by looking at how deadly it is in closely-related species. A number of emerging infectious diseases - including some of the most deadly outbreaks such as Ebola, SARS and HIV - are the result of humans becoming infected with a pathogen that normally infects another species. The amount of harm caused by a pathogen when it jumps into a new ...

Meta-analysis finds extended DAPT related to increased mortality after DES implantation

2015-03-17
NEW YORK, NY - March 13, 2015 - Data from a meta-analysis published today in The Lancet found that extended duration dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation was associated with significantly higher rates of mortality compared to shorter DAPT. The optimal duration of DAPT has been a matter of debate since the introduction of DES. A meta-analysis using multiple analytical approaches to investigate mortality and other clinical outcomes with different DAPT strategies was conducted. Researchers examined 31,666 patients from 10 randomized ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

From COVID to cancer, new at-home test spots disease with startling accuracy

Now accepting submissions: Special Collection on Cognitive Aging

Young adult literature is not as young as it used to be

Can ChatGPT actually “see” red? New results of Google-funded study are nuanced

Turning quantum bottlenecks into breakthroughs

Cancer-fighting herpes virus shown to be an effective treatment for some advanced melanoma

Eliminating invasive rats may restore the flow of nutrients across food chain networks in Seychelles

World’s first: Lithuanian scientists’ discovery may transform OLED technology and explosives detection

Rice researchers develop superstrong, eco-friendly materials from bacteria

Itani studying translation potential of secure & efficient software updates in industrial internet of things architectures

Elucidating the source process of the 2021 south sandwich islands tsunami earthquake

Zhu studying use of big data in verification of route choice models

Common autoimmune drug may help reverse immunotherapy-induced diabetes, UCLA study finds

Quantum battery device lasts much longer than previous demonstrations

Gamma knife stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases from ovarian cancer

Meet the “plastivore” caterpillars that grow fat from eating plastic

Study identifies postoperative delirium as preventable “acute brain failure” with major health and financial implications

Climate change linked to decline in nutritional quality of food

Abdominal fat linked to reduced strength and mobility in adults

Mount Sinai implements Own the Bone® program for fragility fracture patients

Is Earth inside a huge void? 'Sound of the Big Bang' hints at possible solution to Hubble tension

When stem cells feel the squeeze, they start building bone

Revealing Myanmar earthquake as a unique event comprising multiple sub-events, including boomerang-like reverse rupture propagation and supershear rupture

AI helps radiologists spot more lesions in mammograms

Efficient elastic tissues may hold the secrets to Olympic success

Does exercise really improve mental health?

Behind the ballistics of the “explosive” squirting cucumber

Researchers find compound that inhibits cutaneous HPVs

City of Hope Research Spotlight, April/May 2025

The gut microbiota in elderly patients with acute hepatitis E infection

[Press-News.org] Research uncovers flawed IQ scoring system
Queen's researcher reveals difference in American, Canadian scoring systems