1974
DOI: 10.1016/0022-0965(74)90129-5
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Visual masking, mental age, and retardation

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Cited by 17 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
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“…First, the mean individually determined SOA for e^ch of the five groups in the study was comparable. The nonretarded adult groups did not differ fi-om the mildly retarded and child groups, a finding that is inconsistent with some earlier masking studies which have indicated that nonretarded adults are better (more accurate at shorter SOAs) than mentally retarded and equal-MA matched subjects in their ability to identify a masked stimulus (Mosley 1980;Saccuzzo et al 1979;Spitz & Thor 1968;Welsandt & Meyer 1974). Second, the present findings revealed that the experimental SOA remained stable across the 120 experimental trials for all subjects in each of the groups.…”
Section: Durabilitycontrasting
confidence: 84%
“…First, the mean individually determined SOA for e^ch of the five groups in the study was comparable. The nonretarded adult groups did not differ fi-om the mildly retarded and child groups, a finding that is inconsistent with some earlier masking studies which have indicated that nonretarded adults are better (more accurate at shorter SOAs) than mentally retarded and equal-MA matched subjects in their ability to identify a masked stimulus (Mosley 1980;Saccuzzo et al 1979;Spitz & Thor 1968;Welsandt & Meyer 1974). Second, the present findings revealed that the experimental SOA remained stable across the 120 experimental trials for all subjects in each of the groups.…”
Section: Durabilitycontrasting
confidence: 84%
“…Results were interpreted as indicating slow processing in the retarded group, which was believed to be the result of low mental age. A more recent backward-masking study, however, found that mildly retarded adolescents were less resistant to the mask than were mental age as well as chronological age control groups (Welsandt & Meyer, 1974). Results were interpreted in terms of a deficiency in input capability (i.e., iconic storage), which was hypothesized to be related to factors underlying mental retardation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…In mental retardation research, for example, considerable controversy has centered around the underlying source of performance deficits related to visual information processing (see Spitz, 1973). One major issue concerns whether observed differences between retarded and nonretarded persons on tasks related to visual processing can be explained solely on the basis of low mental age in the retarded persons (e.g., Galbraith & Gliddon, 1972;Spitz & Thor, 1968;Thor, 1970;Welsandt & Meyer, 1974). Another major unresolved issue concerns which stage or stages of processing are most impaired in retarded persons.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No studies of the distribution of individual variation in iconic memory ability have been found. Iconic performance in normal children has been compared with that in dyslexics (Stanley and Hall, 1973), and with adolescent retardates (Welsandt and Meyer, 1974), but neither study found a difference in icon retention. Guthrie (1972) found a significant relationship between reading ability and short-term visual memory in children.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%