10 - intelligence Flashcards

1
Q

Intelligence

A

the ability to enquire knowledge, to think and reason effectively, and to deal adaptively with the environment.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Sir Francis Galton

A

He pioneered the study of mental ability and hereditary intelligence, conducting tests on reaction speed, hand strength, sensory acuity, and skull size. Yet, his work drew criticism for focusing on privileged individuals and seeking to prove a biological basis for intelligence.
- Stops after 16-18.

(darwin cousin - biological bias)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Lewis Therman & Stanford-Binet Intelligence test:

A

at what age a child should be able to do certain things.

Lewis Therman (USA) revised Binet´s test and created the Stanford-Binet test.

Used in WW1 (1.7m tested)

New tests came: Thorndike & Otis-Lennon ++

Later: Wechsler (critic: too much verbal skills) developed a test that measured both verbal and non-verbal abilities.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

William Stern

A

took this further and developed a relative score – IQ. Was less useful on adults. Stagnate at 16 ish

Intelligence Quotient (IQ): the ratio of mental age to chronological age, multiplied by 100; IQ = (mental age/ chronological age) X 100.

Today we no longer use mental age in the calculation.

Today it is based on someone’s performance relative to the average performance of the same group. Average of 100. “Deviation IQ”

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

2 major approaches to study intelligence

A

The Psychometric Approach and The Cognitive Processes Approach

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

The Psychometric Approach

A

Map the structure of intellect and discover the

kinds of mental competences that underlie test performance.

Factor Analysis

The G Factor (general intelligence)

Intelligence as specified mental abilities

Crystallized and Fluid Intelligence

Carrol´s three-stratum model: a modern synthesis

the statistical study of psychological tests.

Basically tries to provide a measurement-based map of the mind. It’s a way to make sense of our psychological world through the language of statistics.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

The Cognitive Processes Approach

A

Studies the specific thought process that underlie those mental competencies.

Memory research

Problem solving

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

FACTOR ANALYSIS

A

used to identify cluster behaviors that are highly correlated (positively or negatively) with one another, but not with behaviors in other clusters. Only tells us that and not why.

Example: say you are a psychometric researcher studying intelligence. You have the data from various tests measuring different abilities. By using Factor Analysis, you find out that some abilities are highly correlated, but others are not. These means that different mental abilities are part of different clusters. Math skills and spatial awareness might be in the same cluster, while verbal reasoning is in another cluster.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

THE G FACTOR: INTELLIGENCE AS GENERAL MENTAL CAPACITY

A

general factor – general intelligence

Charles Spearman (1923)

The idea that everyone has an overall general mental capacity that affect how well you do on different types of mental challenges.

IQ score, just broader. Also includes Problem solving etc..

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

INTELLIGENCE AS SPECIFIED MENTAL ABILITIES

A

Thurstone going against Spearman´s “G Factor” theory and stating there are not ONE General factor, but rather 7 distinct abilities – Primary Mental Abilities.

Educators prefer more specific measures. It makes it easier to spot weaknesses and strengths one might target.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Crystallized intelligence (gc)

A

the ability to apply previously acquired knowledge to current problems. Stable with age.

Knowing how to read a map.

Long term memory

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Fluid intelligence (gf)

A

the ability to deal with new problem-solving situations for which personal experience does not provide a solution. Declines with age.

improvising/problem solving (adapt)

Working memory

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Three-Stratum theory of cognitive abilities

A

establishes three levels of mental skills – general, broad and narrow – arranged in a hierarchical model.

Stratum 3: G factor

Stratum 2: Fluid, Crystallized, general memory and learning, broad visual perception, broad auditory perception, broad retrieval ability, broad cognitive speediness, processing speed (reaction time/decision speed)

Stratum 1: Specified cognitive, perceptual and speed tasks used in studies of cognitive ability.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Cognitive Process Theories

A

explore the specific information-processing and cognitive processes that underlie intellectual ability

Focuses on the underlying mental processes that contribute to intelligence

Example: attention, memory, problem solving etc.

Similarity to Galton’s work (biological bias) in the way he linked intelligence to speed of reaction and sensory acuity.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

STERNBERG´S TRIACHIC THEORY OF INTELLIGENCE

A

addresses both the psychological processes involved in intelligent behavior and the diverse forms that intelligence can take.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

UNDERLYING COGNITIVE PROCESSES in STERNBERG´S TRIACHIC THEORY OF INTELLIGENCE

A

Meta components: The higher-order processes used to plan and regulate task performance.

Example: planning your week.

Performance components: The actual mental processes used to perform the task

Example: carry out the instructions of the meta-components.

Knowledge-acquisition components: allow us to learn from our experiences, store information in memory and combine new insights with previously acquired information.

Example: learning to ride a bike.

Crystallized intelligence

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

TYPES OF INTELLECTUAL COMPETENCE in Sternbergs STERNBERG´S TRIACHIC THEORY OF INTELLIGENCE

A

Analytical Intelligence

Academic

Practical Intelligence

Everyday demands

Creative Intelligence

Improvising

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

GARDNER´S MULTIPLE INTELLEGENCES

A

Inspired by how different brain parts control different human abilities (brain damages). He defines 8 distinct varieties of adaptive abilities:

Linguistic Intelligence

Logical-mathematical intelligence

Visuospatial intelligence

Musical intelligence

Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence

Interpersonal intelligence

Intrapersonal intelligence

Naturalistic intelligence

Existential intelligence (speculated)

Typically measured through self-reporting

“Are you good at finding your way around new buildings or cities?” (Likert-scale)

Controversial because it goes far beyond traditional concepts of intelligence.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE

A

the abilities to read others emotions accurately, to respond to them appropriately, to motivate oneself, to be aware of one’s own emotions, and to regulate and control one’s own emotional responses. Divided into 4 branches:

Perceiving emotions

Using emotions to facilitate thought

Understanding emotions.

Managing emotions.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

Wechsler Adult Intelligence (WAIS-IV)

A

Ages 16-90

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-V)

A

Ages 6-16

22
Q

Wechsler

A

Wide range of different mental abilities.

4 subscales

Verbal comprehension

Perceptual reasoning

Working memory

Processing speed

23
Q

The Wechsler and Standford-Binet tests

A

started “everything”.

Standford-Binet test initially yielded a single IQ score based on verbal items, but is today much wider.

24
Q

Achievement test

A

designed to find out how much someone has learned so far in their lives.

Basically, should we test for what they know, or what they can learn? Achievement testing is often a good predictor for future learning as well. Aptitude-testing is presumably more fair.

Most intelligence tests measure both.

25
Q

Aptitude test

A

Novel puzzle-like problems that presumably go beyond prior learning and are thought to measure the applicants potential for future learning and performance.

Basically, should we test for what they know, or what they can learn? Achievement testing is often a good predictor for future learning as well. Aptitude-testing is presumably more fair.

Most intelligence tests measure both.

26
Q

Psychological test

A

a method for measuring individual differences related to some psychological concept, or construct, based on a sample of relevant behaviour.

Example: IQ test (intelligence = construct)

27
Q

3 Important Measurement Concepts

A

Reliability

Validity

Standardization

28
Q

Reliability

A

consistency of measurement

29
Q

Test-retest reliability

A

assessed by administering the measure to the same group of participants on two. (or more) separate occasions and correlating the two (or more) sets of scores.

30
Q

Internal Consistency

A

consistency of measurement within the test itself

Example: all the questions on a math-test are measuring your math skills.

31
Q

Inter-rater reliability

A

consistency of measurement when different people observe the same event or score the same test.

Example: having another doctor give their diagnosis to check if it is there is a inter-rater reliability.

32
Q

Validity

A

how well a test actually measures what it is designed to measure.

33
Q

Construct validity

A

whether a test can measure a construct (IQ) adequately.

34
Q

Content validity

A

does it test all the knowledge that underlie the construct of interest?

Final exam has high content validity if it covers all chapter.

35
Q

Criterion-related validity

A

if it predicts what you want it to.

Does a personality test during an interview predict if a person will do a good job?

36
Q

Reality of High IQ

A

There are important real-life implications of having a good IQ and IQ-tests have predictive validity of real-life outcomes in everything from career and salary, through to health and longevity.

37
Q

Standardization

A
38
Q

Norms

A

rules (often unwritten) that specify what behaviour is acceptable and expected for members of a group.

39
Q

Normal distribution

A

bell-shaped curve with most scores clustering around the centre of the curve.

40
Q

The Flynn Effect

A

refers to the well-documented phenomenon that we are increasingly getting “smarter”. People score higher on IQ-tests. Critic: this could be due to nutrition, academic development and changes in ways of thinking etc..

Fluid intelligence = increase over time

Crystallized intelligence = decrease over time

41
Q

Dynamic testing

A

Standard testing is followed up with an interaction in which the examiner gives the respondent guided feedback on how to improve performance and observes how the person utilizes the information.

42
Q

Static testing

A

traditional approach to testing. Testing what they know, rather than how they might utilize feedback.

Example: IQ-tests.

43
Q

ASSESSING INTELLIGENCE ACROSS THE WORLD (2 approaches)

A
  1. do not base it on the culture.
  2. Base it on the culture
44
Q

Genes

A

Genes are important factors for the G-factor - Charles Spearman (1923)

Genes account for between 50-70% of population variation in IQ

Shared family environment accounts for perhaps 25-33% of the variance during childhood, but its effects seem to dissipate as people age

45
Q

Stereotype threat

A

when a person’s performance is harmed because of others negative views of that group.

Women + army/sports

46
Q

Intellectually gifted

A

IQ´s 130+ (2.5%)

Often very talented in one area, but average in other

47
Q
A
48
Q

Scans of high IQ brains show

A

better inter-and intra-hemispheric white matter integrity, which indicates stable electrical current flows in neuronal cells, with minimal disruptions to cell communications.

Several genes involved in hereditary intelligence.

49
Q

Eminence later in life is argued to be a product of 3 factors (Renzulli):

A

Highly developed mental abilities

Creative Problem-solving

Motivation and dedication

50
Q

Vary in Learning disability severeness.

A

Mild = 50-70 IQ

Moderate = 35-50 IQ

Severe = 20-35 IQ

Profound = below 20 IQ

51
Q
A