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Learning, memory, and transfer in profoundly, severely, and moderately mentally retarded persons

Authors :
N R, Ellis
J R, Deacon
L A, Harris
A, Poor
D, Angers
M S, Diorio
R S, Watkins
B D, Boyd
A R, Cavalier
Source :
American journal of mental deficiency. 87(2)
Publication Year :
1982

Abstract

Discrimination learning, memory, and transfer capacity were assessed in representative samples of institutionalized retarded persons in order to provide information on trainability. The 56 subjects were selected from moderately, severely, and two levels of profoundly retarded adults. They learned and relearned three successive two-choice discrimination problems. Generally, the higher functioning subjects, defined by IQ and adaptive behavior learned more rapidly than did the lower functioning subjects. Forgetting was related to IQ/adaptive behavior level. Interproblem transfer was negligible at all levels of retardation, but ceiling effects may have obscured positive transfer in the higher functioning groups. Backward learning curves revealed large differences between lower and higher functioning persons in the presolution trials, but once learning began even profoundly retarded subjects solved these problems as rapidly as did the moderately retarded subjects. Ten of the 56 subjects failed to learn all three problems.

Details

ISSN :
00029351
Volume :
87
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of mental deficiency
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e9e1d4c6e484b4cb5315b2def1f523d8