Lecture 3 & Kennisclips 1, 2 en 3 Flashcards
What are intelligent people in the eye of the general public?
Intelligent people are:
- smart, quick thinkers who are good problem solvers
- Good at reasoning, reading and understanding
- sensible, reasonable and open-minded
- self motivated go-getters
Intelligence working definition
Many theories and definitions:
- Abstract, logical, consistent reasoning.
- discovering relationship and rules (inductive reasoning)
- problem solving
- solving new tasks with knowledge already acquired (transfeR_
- Felxible adjustment
- Potential for learning (without through instruction)
so many subskills.
a collection of cognitive ski;;s
Cattell and Horn’s intelligence theory
Two main components:
- Fluid intelligence: culture independent, the ability to solve novel problems, the ability to perceive relationships, ability to acquire new type of knowledge
- Crystallised intelligence: culture dependent, factual knowledge about the world (what are the dutch king and queen’s names?)
Vernon’s hierarchical theory
General ability divided into –> major group factors ( verbal0educational) vs (spatial mechanical) –> Minor group factors: (creative ablitis, verbal fluency and numerical factors) vs (spatial factors, psychomotor factors, mechanical information factors. –> get divided into specific factors and they get tested.
Vernon also said about intelligence..
A = like spearmans g (general intelligence_
- intelligence potential
- innate,m genetic, stabl;e and culturally independent
- cannot be developed in relation to the environment
B = the expression of genetic potential in individual traits and abilities influenced by the environment
C = Specific test performance
- operationalisation of what we believe intelligence entails.
C = reflection of B, and B is a reflection of A (indirectly)
Carroll’s three sttratum theory of intelligence
The three-stratum theory is a theory of cognitive ability proposed by the American psychologist John Carroll in 1993. It is based on a factor-analytic study of the correlation of individual-difference variables from data such as psychological tests, school marks and competence ratings from more than 460 datasets.
There’s a general intelligence that can be seperated into different cognitive abilities that can also be divided into subsets.
CHC- model: integration of previous theories
Intelligence is a complex psychological concept with various cognitive aspects, commonly indicationg a level of general ability and, at the same time, involving various cognitive aspects measuring specific cognitive (intellectual) factors.
What can we conclude out of the diffrence between the longitudinal and cross sectional research for the development of fluid intelligence?
The longitudinal research shows that fluid intelligence develops onto late adulthood, notn until your 20s as the cross sectional study says!
Flynn effect
a worldwide trend, over generations people have significant gains in performance on an intelligence test.
A gain of 3 percentage points per decade.
Occured until 1990s when it stopped or regersed in developed countries like Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Birtain and Australia.
What kind of intelligence has the most gained over generations?
Fluid intelligence task (Raven progressive matrices, Block patterns, verbal understanding)
What has not gained a lot over the past generations?
Least gain had been found on vocabulary tasls.
Why does the Flynn effect occur?
- No changes in genetic makeup, maybe a bit of change in education,
But a lot of changes in the complexity of the environment. We are starting to use are brain way better than we used to. cognitive revolution. We are much better trained. We ar enot a lot smarter, but we train our brains better!
Teachers and educational psychologist gather information on a child’s cognitive functioning…
- To predict future success
- to find strong and weak elements of cognitive functioning
- to restructure/individualise instruction
First intelligence was developed in and by who?
1905 by binet and colleagues:
- academic intelligence related to mental age.
- intelligence = the ability to learn
whites, boys, high middle class. It differentiates, but it doesn’t measure the ability to learn. it measures previous learning for the most part.
even tho a 100 years it still looks the same: object naming, reconstructing designs, memorising series.
What does an IQ test measure?
- Obtained knowledge and skills
- a snapshot of these knowledge and skills
- considered a good, but indirect, measure of intelligence (measure of intelligence C of vernon)