Intelligence
- Created by: Ross Hill
- Created on: 18-05-16 11:06
What is Intelligence?
Intelligence --> the global capacity to profit from experience and to go beyond given info about the environment
Intelligence Quotient (IQ)--> index derived from standardised tests of intelligence, originally obtained by individual mental age/chronological age x100. Now it is directly computed as an IQ test score
History of Intelligence Testing
Alfred Binet; Identify children who would benefit from remedial education
- Binet assumed that intelligence= capacity that matters for many tasks --> good at many tasks means you are intelligent
- IQ scores reflected a composite of performance on all tasks --> general ability
William Stern's Intelligence Quotient;
- IQ= Mental Age/Chronological Age X100
- Mental Age--> level of development reflected in test performance
- Chronological Age --> expected score at current age of test
- Same Mental & Chronological Age=100
- 8yr old answering 10yr old questions= 125
- BUT... 50 year old with mental age of 20yr old cant have and iq of 40
Recent IQ Tests;
- Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children v4 (WISC-IV)
- Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-IV)--> Variety of verbal and performance tasks. Seperate sub tests assess WM and speed of intellectural processing
Recent IQ Tests- Raven's Progressive Matrices
Test single specific capacities like the ability to perceive patterns
Minimise influence from verbal skills/ background knowledge
Principles of Test Construction
Reliability --> Need to evaluate how consistent a measure is in its results
- Using test-retest reliability
- Intelligence tests have a high test-retest reliability e.g. age 6 and 18
- HOWEVER.... substantial change in environment can affect stability
Validity --> Does the test really measure what its intneded to measure
- Predictive Validity --> Assesement of whether a test measures what its suppost to measure, based on whether test score correlates with another relevant criterion measured later
- Results= Good predictive validity for academic and workplace performance in more complex jobs
IQ Heavily influences life outcomes--> larger earnings, higher prestige careers, live longer, less likely to die in accident, less likely to struggle to follow doctor's instructions
What is Intelligence?/General Vs Specific
Binet--> IQ= Singular ability that can apply to any context
Score= General Intelligence--> a capacity that would provide an advantage on any mental task
Alternative View;
IQ= Level of achievement produced by a person's collection of more specific talents
Strengths and Weaknesses. 1 Score=Crude Summary
Psychometric Approach to Intelligence--> looking for patterns of actual test scores
Factor Analysis
WAIS;
- Scores on subtests tend to be highly correlated with each other
- Tests not independent of each other overlap in what they measure
Factor Analysis;
- Statistical method for studying interrelations among tests
- Distils from a pattern of correlations a broad summary of how they are all related
- Common factors shared by several scores
- 2 subtest scores are correlated they are influenced by the same factor
General Intelligence
A general factor (g) is general intelligence --> mental attribute that is hypothesised as contributing to performance of virtually any intellectual task
Spearman thought g was the core of human intelligence
g's give a huge advantage
Spearman argued that each subtest depends on g and specialised ability
Mental Speed
IQ takes time as it requires complex mental processes
Hypotheses suggest high IQ people are fster in all mental steps or those needed for mental retrieval
HOWEVER.... could be differences in brain structure that lead to differences in mental speed;
- Greater myelination in brain neurons
- Greater availabilty of metabolic fuel for neurons
Simple and choice reaction times are negativly correlated with intelligence. Suggests that intelligent people have brains that operate quiker and more efficiently
Less energy consumption with a higher IQ- more efficient brain
Working Memory Capacity
Working Memory Capacity --> measure of how efficiently a person can manage multiple mental processes at once
Tasks can involve;
- Multiple bits of info that need to be kept track of
- Multiple steps which demand a shif of focus from one moment to the next
Intelligent people may have;
- Good working memories- keep multiple goals in mind
- Good control of attention
Executive Control --> launch mental actions, redirect attention, shift strategies
P-FIT Theory of Intelligence
Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory of Intelligence (Jung and Haier, 2007);
- Intelligence arises from integration of activity among a network of brain slices associated with attention, working memory and language proessing among others
Beyond IQ Test: Practical Intelligence
Important predictor of business success
Analytic Intelligence--> ability measured by IQ Tests and crucial for academic success
Practical Intelligence --> ability to solve everyday problems through skilled reasoning that relies on tacit knowledge
Beyond IQ Test: Emotional Intelligence
The ability to understand your own and others emotions and control your own emotions appropriately
Emotion plays a role in;
- Guiding problem solving and decision making
- Guiding our attention
- Shaping what we remember
Emotion and Cognition interact
Beyond IQ Test: Multiple Intelligences
Lingustic, Logical-Mathematical, Spatial, Musical
Bodily Kinesthetic -->ability to learna and create, Complex patterns of movement
Interpersonal --> ability to understand other people
Interpersonal --> ability to understand ourselves
Naturalistic --> ability to understand patterns in nature
Gardner, 1983 & 1999
Beyond IQ Test: Culture and Intelligence
Understanding of intelligence needs to take into account cultural context
Different Cultures have;
different concpetions of intelligence
different ideas on proper procedure for assesing intelligence
affects how cultures respond to westernised test
VERY HARD TO DEVELOP A CULTURE FREE INTELLIGENCE TEST AND SO WE NEED TO BE CAREFUL OF THIS WHEN TESTS TAKE PLACE
Origins of Intelligence: Nature vs Nurture
Both
Extent of contribution from each varies person to person;
- Genetics- eye colour
- Environment - language spoken (ability to learn language depends on genetics)
Origins of Intelligence: Genetic Influence
Correlation between IQ of parent and child is +40
Correlation btween IQ of biological siblings +40
Similar genetics or environment?
Mz Twins have more similar IQs (.86) than Dz Twins (.60)--> must be a genetic component
Mz Twins have similar IQ regardless of whether the twins were raised in the same household oR apart (.75)
Adopted children have an IQ more in common with bith parents and not adoptive parents--> Genetics more important than environment
Origins of Intelligence: Environmental Influence
Correlation between sibling IQ is less when born further apart--> family circumstances may have changed grew up in seperate environments
Impoverished environments can impede intellectural development;
- Longer a child has no/little schooling the lower IQ
- Correlation of 0.40 between IQ Scores and Socio-economic status
- Improved environment can improve Intelligence
IQ of children adopted out of horrible environments in which they had been abused or neglected --> after adoption IQ was markedly higher especially if adopted into a family with higher Socio-economic status
Flynn Effect--> worldwide improvement in IQ scores observed over the last few decades
Many countries. Stronger fluid intelligence
Better nutrition and healthcare?
More exposure to info and perspectives
Cannot be genetic as the increase is too quick
Heritability Ratio
Heritability Ratio (H)--> a measure of the relative weight of genetic and environmental factors in determinng variability of a given characteritic within a population
Value of H depends on particular population & degree to which variability within a population can be attributed to genetic variance
Fall between .40 and .70;
- 40-70% variance=genetic
- Genetics and environment equally important
- Middle class children lower heritability than middle class
Example--> phenylketonuria (PKU)= Cant digest phenyalanine so its converted to a toxin --> mental retardation
Genetic origin but variation is largely due to the environment
H only reflects certain circumstances in particular groups
IQ Comparisons
Between group differences may be due to environmental factors
Within group differences reflects genetic variation
Sources of differences can be diminished by approrpriate changes to the environment;
- Improving nutrition
- Health Care
- Education
- Combating Stereotypes
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