WAIS-IV (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale)
The most widely used clinical measure of adult cognitive ability in English-speaking countries. Published by Pearson in 2008. Administered one-on-one by a trained psychologist in 60 to 90 minutes. Yields a Full-Scale IQ plus four index scores: Verbal Comprehension, Perceptual Reasoning, Working Memory, Processing Speed.
The most widely used clinical measure of adult cognitive ability in English-speaking countries. Published by Pearson in 2008. Administered one-on-one by a trained psychologist in 60 to 90 minutes. Yields a Full-Scale IQ plus four index scores: Verbal Comprehension, Perceptual Reasoning, Working Memory, Processing Speed.
This term appears throughout the cognitive ability literature and across this site's articles. Understanding it is essential for interpreting any IQ score or cognitive subtest result. Modern psychometric textbooks (such as those by Anne Anastasi or Susan Embretson) cover the term in significant additional depth and document the empirical findings that justify its prominence in the field.
In the context of online IQ testing, the implications of this term are usually that the test-taker should be cautious about over-interpreting brief screener results. Most of the published precision claims for major IQ batteries do not transfer directly to short online instruments, and the relevant adjustments — wider confidence intervals, more conservative band assignments — are best made explicitly rather than ignored.
For further reading on this term, consult the related entries in this glossary and the deep-dive articles linked in the Related Reading section. The American Psychological Association's task force report 'Intelligence: Knowns and Unknowns' (1995) and its follow-ups remain the most authoritative summary at an accessible technical level.
Other glossary entries
Validity
The degree to which a test measures what it claims to measure. Multiple flavors: construct validity (does the test measu…
Factor analysis
The statistical technique used to identify latent variables (factors) that account for shared variance across observed m…
Mensa
An international high-IQ society, founded in 1946, requiring scores at or above the 98th percentile on a battery of appr…
Percentile rank
The proportion of a reference population scoring at or below a given score, expressed as a percentage. A percentile of 7…
Flynn effect
The systematic rise in average IQ scores across the 20th century — about 3 IQ points per decade in industrialized countr…
Item difficulty
The proportion of a reference sample that answers a particular item correctly. Easy items (proportion correct > 0.7) dis…