week 5 Lecture 5 Theories & Measurement of Intelligence Catherine Flashcards
To Provide an overview of the Key Theories of Intelligence & Measures of Intelligence as covered in Lecture 5
What is Wechsler’s definition of Intelligence?
“Intelligence is the capacity to learn & use the skills that are required for successful adaptation to the demands of one’s cultural environment” Wechsler (1961) “The ability to acquire & apply skills & knowledge”
What is an important aspect of intelligence, overlooked by the early intelligence tests & theorists?
*Cultural influence on intelligence *the Cultural relativity of who is defined as intelligent
List the History of Intelligence researchers & approximate key years
Mid 1800’s - Sir Francis Galton - genius is heredity Early 1900’s - Alfred Binet - modern intelligence test (Binet-Simon Test) 1920’s - Charles Spearman (g & other factors) Lewis Terman (Stanford-Binet test) Mid 1960’s onwards - David Wechsler (WAIS)
What is a main consideration among intelligence researchers?
-Whether intelligence is unitary (one thing) or a composite of several independent abilities
Name the 3 main approaches to Intelligence
- The Factor Analytical Approach AKA Psychometric Approach 2. The Information Processing Approach 3. Gardener’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences
Name the Main components of the Factor Analytical Approach AKA Psychometric Approach to intelligence
*IQ Scores are generally stable *IQ Scores are considered valid -Mental ability is the strongest predictor of work success (Schmidt & Hunter, 1998) -though having a high IQ doesn’t guarantee success *Some factors may link specific abilities: Comprehension, arithmetic, vocabulary, information processing correlate
Name the Main Theories of the Factor Analytical Approach AKA Psychometric Approach to intelligence
*Spearman’s Two-Factor Theory (g) *Carroll’s Three-Strata Theory *The Carroll-Horne-Cattell (CHC) Model
What are the main concepts incorporated in Spearman’s Two-Factor Theory (g)?
*Spearman was the first theorist to postulate the theory of general intelligence *Spearman introduced statistical techniques that allowed for testing of different/ competing theories *Spearman proposed a Two-Factor (GENERAL + SPECIFIC) theory of intelligence *Spearman stated that Intelligence = g + (s + e) NB: g is variance all tests have in common; s = specific component; e = error
What is g in Spearman’s Two-Factor Theory?
*g is Fluid (Gf) vs Crystallised (Gc) intelligence *Fluid intelligence peaks in young adulthood *Fluid intelligence is about creativity, flexible thinking, problem solving abilities *Crystallised peaks around 50-60 years of age *Crystallised intelligence is ability to learn & retain facts & knowledge *Fluid and Crystallised intelligence overlap: if you have strong fluid intelligence, you are likely to have solid crystallised intelligence too
Can we measure g?
*It is unclear if general intelligence (g) is a marker of how neural networks process efficiently (AKA Neural Efficiency) *g is thought to include motivation, attitude, effort, etc., as well as fluid & crystallised intelligence *Nevertheless, the validity & practically of g is strong (according to the slide!)
What are the 7 types of g intelligence?
*Gv = Visual Processing *Ga = Auditory Processing Gq = Quantitative Processing Gs = Speed of Processing Grw = Reading & Writing Gsm = Short Term Memory Processing Glr = Long Term Memory Processing
What are the 8 forms of Intelligence incorporated in Strata II of Carroll’s Three-Strata Theory?
Strata II contains Broad skills: *Fluid *Crystallised *General Memory & Learning *Broad Visual Perception *Broad Auditory Perception *Broad Retrieval Ability *Broad Cognitive Speediness *Processing Speed
What are the main concepts incorporated in Carroll’s Three-Strata Theory?
Strata III: Generalised intelligence Strata II: Broad Intelligence (8 kinds) Strata I: Narrow intelligence (individual specific abilities) Strata I is dependent on Strata II (broad skill); which likewise, is dependent on Strata III (Generalised skill)
What are the main concepts incorporated in The Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) Model?
*The CHC Model of cognitive ability has grown *Schneider & McGrew (2012) highlight the complexity of modern day intelligence taxonomies *The CHC model comprises 10 broad abilities with 70 narrow abilities sitting under them *In this model there is no measure of g as they are unable to measure it *The do believe g exists - it sits at the top of the model “untapped” with the 10 broad abilities coming from it
What are the 10 + 6 broad abilities, sitting under g, incorporated in The Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) Model?
*Gc = Crystalised Comprehension Knowledge *Gf = Fluid Reasoning (Horn:) *Gq = Quantitative Knowledge *Gv = Visual Processing *Ga = Auditory Processing *Gs = Processing Speed *Grw = Reading & writing *Gsm = Short-term memory *Glr = Long-term Storage & Retrieval *Gt = Reaction & Decision Speed —————————- *Gkn = Domain Specific Knowledge *Gps = Psychomotor Speed *Go = Olfactory Abilities *Gh = Tactile Abilities *Gk = Kinaesthetic Abilities *Gp = Psychomotor Abilities
What are the Functional groupings of broad intelligence, sitting under g, incorporated in The Cattell-Horne-Carroll (CHC) Model?
*Acquired knowledge *Memory (Learning & retrieval) *Motor abilities *General Speed
What are the Conceptual groupings of broad intelligence, sitting under g, incorporated in The Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) Model?
*Domain Independent general capacities *Sensory Motor Domain Specific Abilities
Name the Main Components of Gardener’s Theory of Multiple intelligences
*Theory of Multiple Intelligences *No Single over-arching intelligence (g) *Eight independent intelligences
Name the Main Components of the Triarchic Theory of intelligence (Sternberg) of the Information Processing Approach
This theory looks at how intelligence is acquired: 1. Meta-components (Planning & Monitoring) 2. Performance Components (administrating & using instructions) 3. Knowledge-Acquisition Components (Learning & Knowing what to do in the first place)
Name the Main Components of the Information Processing Approach
*It is not as accepted in the literature as the CHC model *Simultaneous and successive processing (Luria) *Low level ability affects higher order cognitions *Triarchic Theory of intelligence (Sternberg)
Give a brief history of the evolution of the Factor Analytic Approach to intelligence including Spearman, Cattell & Horne, Carroll, & the CHC Model
Spearman: intelligence = g + (s + e) g = general intelligence (found when 2 tests overlap), s = specific abilities, e = error Cattell & Horn: Gf (fluid), Gc (crystallised) & 7 specific intelligences Carroll’s 3 strata model: I = General; II = 8 Broad; III = Specific abilities Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) Model: g = present but can’t measure Broad = 10; Narrow = 70 (functional & conceptual groupings)
Name the 8 independent intelligences of Gardener’s Theory of Multiple intelligences
*Linguistic *Logical-Mathematical *Musical *Bodily-Kinaesthetic *Spatial *Interpersonal *Intrapersonal *Naturalist
Name the main issues of Gardener’s Theory of Multiple intelligences
*Is Gardener’s theory tapping ability or intelligence? *No Empirical Support for Gardener’s view (currently) *Gardener’s theory has rekindled the debate about unitary versus multifaceted human intelligence