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Psychology & Developing Societies
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PASS: An Alternative Approach to Intelligence

J.P. Das

Developmental Disabilities Center at the University of Alberta, Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

J. Abbott

Department of Educational Psychology, University of Alberta, Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

As a by-product of the cognitive revolution, a coherent theory of cognitive processing has challenged traditional methods of studying and measuring intelligence. The PASS (Planning, Attention, Simultaneous and Successive cognitive processing) theory of intelligence identifies three operational units that are important to understand mental functioning: attention, simultaneous and successive processing, and planning. The PASS theory of intelligence is based on the neuropsychological work of A.R.Luria. The PASS model is an alternative approach to measuring and studying intelligence. A remediation programme based on the PASS model is presented and its utility in improving the specific cognitive processes that underlie academic skills is discussed.

Psychology & Developing Societies, Vol. 7, No. 2, 155-183 (1995)
DOI: 10.1177/097133369500700204


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Journal of Psychoeducational AssessmentHome page
J. A. Naglieri, J. Rojahn, H. C. Matto, and S. A. Aquilino
Black-White Differences in Cognitive Processing: A Study of the Planning, Attention, Simultaneous, and Successive Theory of Intelligence
Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, June 1, 2005; 23(2): 146 - 160.
[Abstract] [PDF]