“…age or the institutional environment) and the lowest score of the IQ test used (40 or 45 on the Wechsler scales, but lower for other tests). Further bias often occurs for the mean IQ as many individuals with TRS21 record a minimum score (Carlier and Roubertoux 2014 ;Couzens et al 2011 ;Roubertoux and Carlier 2009 ;Tsao and Kindelberger 2009 ) while others cannot be assessed because of their poor language skills and/or the severity of their behavioral disorders. Attention, learning, planning, cognitive flexibility, memory and linguistic abilities are affected (Costanzo et al 2013 ;Grieco et al 2015 ;Lanfranchi et al 2010 ;Vicari 2006 ).…”
“…age or the institutional environment) and the lowest score of the IQ test used (40 or 45 on the Wechsler scales, but lower for other tests). Further bias often occurs for the mean IQ as many individuals with TRS21 record a minimum score (Carlier and Roubertoux 2014 ;Couzens et al 2011 ;Roubertoux and Carlier 2009 ;Tsao and Kindelberger 2009 ) while others cannot be assessed because of their poor language skills and/or the severity of their behavioral disorders. Attention, learning, planning, cognitive flexibility, memory and linguistic abilities are affected (Costanzo et al 2013 ;Grieco et al 2015 ;Lanfranchi et al 2010 ;Vicari 2006 ).…”
“…All children but one were in the lower end of the standard scores, indicating a floor effect. This effect is well-known in research with intellectually disabled persons (e.g., Carlier & Ayoun, 2007;Carlier & Roubertoux, 2014;Hessl et al, 2009). It arises with most intelligence tests (Reynolds & Kamphaus, 2003), which therefore typically fail to detect valid differences in the lower ranges.…”
Section: Cognitive Assessment Of the Photographed Childrenmentioning
“…Despite advances in medical science and human genetics, there remains much to be learned about the etiological and risk factors that might cause ID. In fact, in approximately 40% to 50% of all cases of ID, the cause is unknown (Carlier & Roubertoux, 2014). In some African countries, this uncertainty regarding the cause of a person' s ID may be more than 70% (Adnams, 2010).…”
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.