ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B

›› 2000, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (04): 422-427.

Previous Articles     Next Articles

AN AMNESIC PATIENT WITH RIGHT CEREBRAL DYSPLASIA: PRIMING INDEPENDENT OF INTELLIGENCE

Yu Shengyuan (Neurology Department, Chinese P.LA. General Hospital, Beijing 100853) Wang Changsheng (Department of Psychology, Peking University, Beijing 100871)   

  • Published:2000-12-25 Online:2000-12-25

Abstract: Priming is a major type of implicit memory and memory is traditionally considered as a major component of intelligence. However little is known about the relationship between priming and intelligence. This study conducted with four priming tasks, WISC-CR and WMS-CR on a patient with right cerebral dysplasia to explore the relationship between priming and intelligence. It was found that the patient performed almost equally or even bettor than two normal control groups did on the four priming tasks, but significantly impaired on WISC-CR (IQ = 56) and WMS-CR (MQ = 46). The results suggested that priming was independent of intelligence and its impairment had no effect on implicit learning. It argues that current intelligence theories ignored human unconsciousness and future intelligence tests should include priming or skill learning test contents because implicit memory is also one of the components of human abilities.

Key words: cerebral dysplasia, intelligence, priming, dissociation