The Satz-Mogel abbreviation of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R) was compared with a 7-subtest short form (Ward, 1990) in samples of normal and neurologically impaired elderly persons 75 years and older. The normals were 130 subjects from the old-age WAIS-R standardization sample, and the brain-damaged group consisted of 40 men with medically diagnosed brain dysfunction averaging 79.57 (SD = 5.4) years of age. The short forms were highly similar in administration times, correlations with the WAIS-R IQs (all rs > .92), estimation of the average IQ scores, and in classification of intelligence for both the normal and neurologically impaired subjects. Finally, both short forms correctly estimated significant Verbal IQ-Performance IQ discrepancies about 75% of the time.Abbreviated versions of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R; Wechsler, 1981) were developed to save time. These measures are particularly useful for elderly patients who fatigue easily or whose attention or motivation may diminish if testing becomes prolonged (Caplan, 1983;Paolo & Ryan, 1991). Short forms fall into two categories: (a) selected subtests (Kaufman, 1990;Silverstein, 1982a;Ward, 1990) and (b) selected items (Satz & Mogel, 1962).Selected-subtest short forms that usually consist of two or more subtests are used as brief screening devices to estimate the Full Scale IQ. If screening indicates a need for additional assessment, the remaining WAIS-R components can be administered to provide a more complete evaluation. Numerous investigations have found high validity coefficients and adequate reliability for these abbreviated forms (