Let me start by saying I am by means an expert on this question, but I am a mom whose son took the SB5 recently. So, I do know that they have different groupings and different scoring methods. I wish I had his eval in front of me to explain more.
Here is a quote from the publisher of the SB5 that explains more. There is an ABIQ and CSS scores that are different and incorporate different elements. And also the SB5 isn't effected by processing speed since it isn't timed. There are a few parts that I think have some timing involved, but nothing significant at all.
Here's that quote...
"These subtest scores combine to form four types of composite scores: factor index, domain, abbreviated, and full scale (each with scaled score means of 100, SD of 15, score range 40�160). Two subtests (one verbal, the other its nonverbal complement) combine to form each factor index. There are two domain scales: Nonverbal IQ (NVIQ) (combines the five nonverbal subtests) and Verbal IQ (VIQ) (combines the five verbal subtests). Two routing subtests combine to form the Abbreviated Battery IQ (ABIQ). Finally, the Full Scale IQ (FSIQ) combines all 10 subtests. The Change-Sensitive Scores (CSS) use item response theory scaling to convert the raw score totals on the composite scales described above into criterion-referenced levels of ability. These scales, as with the norm-referenced scores, have excellent measurement properties. Because the CSSs reference absolute levels of ability, they provide a way to compare changes in an individual�s scores over time".
And here is the link if you are interested
http://www.riverpub.com/products/sb5/details.html