Abstract
A total of 15 intellectual and 12 sensory-motor variables were examined as predictors of brain damage in a neurological population with cerebrovascular accidents. Results obtained via Student's t tests and multiple regression analyses demonstrate that it is possible to predict brain damage significantly in this clinical population. Specific conclusions were: (1) as single predictor variables, sensory-motor measures are superior to intellectual measures; (2) brain damage as measured behaviorally is consistent across patient populations in neurological, psychiatric, and neurological sub-groups with CVA; and, (3) multiple variant prediction holds promise for diagnosis of brain damage in a CVA population.
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