LECTURE 3- INTELLIGENCE TESTS Flashcards
What is a culture fair test?
created by Raymond Cattell in 1949 as an attempt to measure cognitive abilities devoid of sociocultural and environmental influences
Raven’s Progressive Matrices
Measure the abstracts ability to see relationships between objects, events and information and draw inferences from those relationships
As in the Wechsler tests, the overall IQ score is based on an individuals deviation from standardised norms
It is free of cultural influences and language is often favoured as a good measure of ‘g’
Raymond cattel- fluid % crystallised intelligence
- General intelligence relies on 2 factors; fluid and crystallised intelligence
- Crystallised intelligence Gc’- acquired knowledge and skills, such as factual knowledge and problem solving- increases through life
- Fluid intelligence ‘Gf’ ability of abstract reasoning, reasoning ability- present from birth and stabilises at adulthood
- Raven progressive matrices measures fluid, WAIS measures both
Theory of multiple intelligences
- Howard Gardner 1983
- Challenges the theory of ‘general intelligence’
- He postulated that intelligences reside in separate sections of the brain, are independent of each other, and are not controlled by any central function of the brain
- He identifies 8 intelligences- linguistics/ logical-mathematical/ visuo-spatial/ musical/ bodily kinaesthetic/ interpersonal/ intrapersonal/ naturalistic
- Critiques:
- Some of Gardner’s intelligences are heard to define’ whether they are measurable is questionable e.g. ‘intrapersonal intelligence’
- Empirical research is limited; evidence does not support the existence of separate neural mechanisms (e.g. Waterhouse, 2006)
- Intelligences are intercorrelated with each other highly and with personality traits (e.g. Furnham 2009)
- Ability tests designed to measure intelligences are highly positively correlated with each other and with general intelligence (e.g. Visser et al 2006)
Emotional intelligence
- Goleman, 1995 suggested 5 components of emotional intelligence
- Identifying one’s own emotions- self awareness
- Managing and controlling one’s emotions- self regulation
- Emotional states related to a drive for achievement – motivation
- Assess and influence others’ emotions- empathy
- ability to sustain good interpersonal relationships -social skills
Emotional intelligence is linked to a variety of psychiatric conditions, academic and job performance, and health.
* Critiques- Are we measuring personality traits or emotional intelligence
CREATIVITY
- Torrance test of creative thinking- subjects are given shapes and are asked to combine them in a picture to complete, use, or combine them in a partial picture- evaluators judge whether the results are more or less creative
- Creativity and intelligence link- the threshold hypothesis; creativity and IQ are correlated only when IQ is below, but not above, a threshold or breakpoint. This hypothesis has mixed finings and is highly debated.
- Correlation between creativity and intelligence is 0.35
rational thinking
- Large numbers of highly select university students at MIT and Harvard gave the intuitive but incorrect answer – 10 cents (Frederick, 2005)
- It has been suggested that rational thinking is a cognitive ability that IQ tests miss (e.g., Stanovich et al., 2020)
- Performance measures of rational thinking correlate only modestly with IQ (e.g., Toplak et al., 2011)
theory of primary mental abilities
The first multi factor theory in 1938 by Louis Leon Thurstone
For this author intelligence was to be understood as a set of primary mental abilities not reducible to a single top-level dimension.
He says g=
number
spatial visualisations
associative memory
verbal comprehensions
reasoning
verbal fluency
perceptual speed
3 stratum theory
hierchal theory of intelligence by John Carroll
Stratum III- general level ‘g’
Stratum II- broad features
Stratum I- specific abilities
Cattel-horn-carroll theory
integration of fluid & crystallised intelligence and the 3- stratum theory
III= ‘G’
II= broad intelligence- crystallised, fluid, memory, processing speed
1= narrow intelligence- specific forms of cognitive abilities
The CHC theory is basically more comprehensive model that incorporates Carroll’s three stratum theory and Cattell-Horn’s Gf-Gc theory. Both Carroll’s and the CHC theory have three strata (narrow abilities (stratum I), broad abilities (stratum II) and a general intelligence factor (stratum III). However, for example, the stratum II has 8 broad factors/abilities in Carroll’s theory and 16 in the CHC theory.