Mdyar wrote:
Todesking wrote:
Well its official I have Aspergers. I got my diagnosis earlier today.
Well, that's mighty fine now, T. And now you are eligible for disability benefits if that need should arise
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I'm beginning to think that the
new WAIS bias -that its being weighted more to "working memory and speed," is based on cultural demands that society now places on individuals, i.e.
speed and working memory in the work environment and keeping abreast of faster moving technologies .
So I'm doubting that this "bias" is purely scientific from the standpoint of the internal psychometrics involved.
Sure, working memory and speed are great , but so are the other "metrics".
What do you think, Horus (or anyone)?
I think you're absolutely correct. I think the bias in question may have some ignorant people (hopefully psychologists won't be among them) devaluing the "intelligence" of people with AS/ASD/NVLD once again. It also can't be great for the self-esteem of people with these disorders (at least those of us who exhibit problems with WM and/or PS) who don't know anything about how the new WAIS works. Often enough...the psychologists who administer the test fail to explain such things to people and some people don't ask too many questions about it.
I can't even say it's a positive development in the sense that it gives people a better idea of where their strengths and weaknesses may lie in workplace environments and other areas of everyday life. After all, it's not as if working memory/processing speed wasn't something that the previous editions of the WAIS measured.
I think what we're looking at here is an attempt to encapsulate significant aspects of what is known as "functional IQ" into full-scale IQ. It's certainly useful to know what your specific assets and deficits are, but I think the new loading of WM and PS is both superfluous and potentially harmful to people on the spectrum.