WISC data were obtained from 25 juvenile murderers and 39 juvenile status offenders. The intellectual pattern of the juveniles was similar to that of their adult counterparts. The over-all scores of the murderers were significantly lower than for status offenders. For both murderers and status offenders the verbal scores were lower than performance scores.
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3.
HaysJ. R.SolwayK. S.Violent behavior and differential WISC characteristics. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1977, 45, 1187.
4.
KunceJ. T.RyanJ. J.EckelmanC. C.Violent behavior and differential WAIS characteristics. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1976, 44, 42–45.
5.
ShawverL.JewC.Predicting violent behavior from WAIS characteristics: a replication failure. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1978, 46, 206.
6.
SolwayK. S.FrugeE.HaysJ. R.CodyJ.GryllS.A comparison of the WISC and WISC-R in a juvenile delinquent population. Journal of Psychology, 1976, 94, 101–106.
7.
SolwayK. S.HaysJ. R.RobertsT. K.CodyJ. A.Comparison of WISC profiles of alleged juvenile delinquents living at home versus those incarcerated. Psychological Reports, 1975, 37, 403–407.
8.
WagnerE. E.KleinI.WAIS differences between murderers and attackers referred for evaluation. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1977, 44, 125–126.