The effect of demographic variables on the assessment of cognitive ability
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How to Cite

Hernández, A., Aguilar, C., Paradell, Èrica, Muñoz, M. R., Vannier, L.-C., & Vallar, F. (2017). The effect of demographic variables on the assessment of cognitive ability. Psicothema, 29(Número 4), 469–474. Retrieved from https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/PST/article/view/16845

Abstract

Background: This study examines the effect of parental educational levels, sex, and family structure on the WISC-V Full Scale IQ (FSIQ) and primary index scores (VCI, VSI, FRI, WMI, and PSI) in a representative sample of children from Spain (N = 1008). Method: Differences between demographic groups were examined using independent-samples t-test, ANOVA and Hochberg post hoc tests. A multiple regression analysis was performed to examine whether demographic variables could predict children’s FSIQ score. Results: Results showed that the parents’ educational level was a significant predictor of children’s FSIQ and significant increases in mean FSIQ and primary index scores were found as the parents’ educational level increased. Sex was not a significant predictor of children’s FSIQ but slight sex differences were found for PSI. The family structure was a significant predictor of FSIQ but its contribution to the global model was small. Children from two-parent families obtained higher FSIQ, VCI, VSI, and FRI mean scores than children from single parent families. Conclusions: The results support the design of a normative sample stratified by demographic variables. Parental education levels, as a good predictor of children’s FSIQ score, must be taken into account as a key stratification variable.
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