The WISC is one test in a suite of Wechsler intelligence scales. Subjects 16 and over are tested with the
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS), and children ages two and half years to seven years and seven months are tested with the
Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI). There is some overlap between tests: children aged 6 years 0 months through 7 years 7 months can complete the WPPSI or the WISC; children aged 16 can complete the WISC-V or the WAIS-IV. Different
floor effect and
ceiling effect can be achieved using the different tests, allowing for a greater understanding of the child's abilities or deficits. This means that a 16-year-old adolescent who has an intellectual disability may be tested using the WISC-V so that the clinician may see the floor of their knowledge (the lowest level). There are five primary index scores, the Verbal Comprehension Index (
VCI), Visual Spatial Index (
VSI), Fluid Reasoning Index (
FRI), Working Memory Index (
WMI), and Processing Speed Index (
PSI). Two subtests must be administered to obtain each of the primary index scores. The Full Scale IQ is derived from 7 of the 10 primary subtests: Both Verbal Comprehension subtests, one Visual Spatial subtest, two Fluid Reasoning subtests, one Working Memory subtest, and one Processing Speed subtest. Verbal Comprehension and Fluid Reasoning are weighted more heavily in the Full Scale IQ to reflect the importance of crystallized and fluid abilities in modern intelligence models (Wechsler, 2014). The
VCI is derived from the Similarities and Vocabulary subtests. The Verbal Comprehension scale subtests are described below: • Similarities – (primary, FSIQ) asking how two words are alike/similar. •
Vocabulary – (primary, FSIQ) examinee is asked to define a provided word •
Information (secondary) –
general knowledge questions. •
Comprehension – (secondary) questions about social situations or common concepts. The VCI is an overall measure of verbal concept formation (the child's ability to verbally reason) and is influenced by semantic knowledge. The
VSI is derived from the Block Design and Visual Puzzles subtests. These subtests are as follows: • Block Design (primary, FSIQ) – children put together red-and-white blocks in a pattern according to a displayed model. This is timed, and some of the more difficult puzzles award bonuses for speed. • Visual Puzzles (primary) – children view a puzzle in a stimulus book and choose from among pieces of which three could construct the puzzle. The VSI is a measure of visual spatial processing. The
FRI is derived from the Matrix Reasoning and Figure Weights subtests. The Fluid Reasoning scale subtests are described below: • Matrix Reasoning (primary, FSIQ) – children are shown an array of pictures with one missing square, and select the picture that fits the array from five options. • Figure Weights (primary, FSIQ) – children view a stimulus book that pictures shapes on a scale (or scales) with one empty side and select the choice that keeps the scale balanced. • Picture Concepts (secondary) – children are provided with a series of pictures presented in rows (either two or three rows) and asked to determine which pictures go together, one from each row. •
Arithmetic (secondary) – orally administered arithmetic word problems. Timed. The FRI is a measure of logical and quantitative reasoning. The
WMI is derived from the Digit Span and Picture Span subtests. The Working Memory scale's subtests are as follows: •
Digit Span (primary, FSIQ) – children listen to sequences of numbers orally and to repeat them as heard, in reverse order, and in ascending order. • Picture Span (primary) – children view pictures in a stimulus book and select from options to indicate the pictures they saw, in order if possible. • Letter-Number Sequencing (secondary) – children are provided a series of numbers and letters and asked to provide them to the examiner in a predetermined order. The WMI is a measure of working memory ability. The
PSI is derived from the Coding and Symbol Search subtests. The Processing Speed subtests are as follows: • Coding (primary, FSIQ) – children under 8 mark rows of shapes with different lines according to a code, children over 8 transcribe a digit-symbol code using a key. The task is time-limited. • Symbol Search (primary) – children are given rows of symbols and target symbols, and asked to mark whether or not the target symbols appear in each row. • Cancellation (secondary) – children scan random and structured arrangements of pictures and marks specific target pictures within a limited amount of time. The PSI is a measure of processing speed. The 2014 publication of the WISC-V contained five ancillary index scores that may be derived for special clinical purposes or situations: the Quantitative Reasoning Index (
QRI), the Auditory Working Memory Index (
AWMI), the Nonverbal Index (
NVI), the General Ability Index (
GAI), and the Cognitive Proficiency Index (
CPI). Three of these ancillary index scores (NVI, GAI, and CPI) can be derived from the 10 primary subtests. The QRI and the AWMI can each be derived by administering one additional subtest from subtests that are within one of the five primary scales (Verbal Comprehension scale, Visual Spatial Index, Fluid Reasoning scale, Working Memory scale, and Processing Speed scale) but are not primary. The set of these subtests is termed secondary subtests (Wechsler, 2014). Two ancillary index scores termed the expanded index scores were released the year after the 2014 publication, so are not included in the published manuals. These are the Verbal (Expanded Crystallized) Index (
VECI) and the Expanded Fluid Index (
EFI) (Raiford, Drozdick, Zhang, & Zhou, 2015). Three complementary index scores are available to measure cognitive processes that are important to achievement and are sensitive to specific learning disabilities. The complementary index scores are the Naming Speed Index (NSI), designed to measure rapid automatized naming, and the Symbol Translation Index, designed to measure visual-verbal associative memory, which is sometimes termed visual-verbal paired associate learning in the published literature (Wechsler, 2014). The Naming Speed scale contains Naming Speed Literacy, which measures
rapid automatic naming, and Naming Speed Quantity, which is the only commercially published and normed measure of rapid quantity naming, also known as
subitizing. Naming Speed Quantity is uniquely sensitive to math achievement and specific learning disabilities in mathematics (Raiford et al., 2016; Wechsler, Raiford, & Holdnack, 2014). ==Psychometric properties==