Title: Thinking and Intelligence
1Thinking and Intelligence
- What type of thing would someone intelligent say?
- What type of thing would someone unintelligent
say? - Name 5 qualities about someone that would
indicate intelligence.
2Reasoning and Rationality
- 1-Formal Reasoning
- 2-Informal Reasoning
- 3-Reflective Judgment
3Formal Reasoning
- It is the kind of thinking you find in an
intelligence test. - The information needed for reaching a solution is
specified clearly. - There is a single right or best answer.
4Formal Reasoning1-Algorithm
- A set of procedures guaranteed to produce a
solution even if you dont really know how it
works. - Example
- To solve a problem in long division you just
apply a series of operations that you have
learned.
5Formal Reasoning2-Logic
- Deductive Reasoning
- Drawing conclusions from a set of observations or
premises. - If the premises are true, the conclusion must
also be true.
- Inductive Reasoning
- Draw conclusions but could be conceivably wrong.
- You draw specific conclusions from general
premises.
6Formal Reasoning2-Logic
- Deductive Reasoning
- Example
- All human beings are mortal. I am a human being.
- If the premises are true
- Then, I am mortal.
- Inductive Reasoning
- Example
- Most people with season tickets must love music.
John has season tickets. - Then, John probably loves music.
7Deductive Thinking
8Inductive Thinking
9Informal Reasoning
- In formal reasoning problems, there may be no
clearly correct solutions. - Disagreement may exist about basic premises.
- Information may be incomplete.
- Many view points may compete.
10Informal Reasoning1-Heuristics
- Rules of thumb that suggest a course of action
without guaranteeing an optimal solution. - Examples
- A doctor who wants to determine the best kind of
treatment. - A A factory owner who wants to boost production.
11Informal Reasoning2-Dialectical Thinking
- Example
- Is what juries are supposed to do in order to
arrive to a verdict. - You consider argument for and against the
defendants guilt. - You consider point and counter point.
12Reflective JudgmentCritical Thinking
- The ability to question the assumptions, evaluate
and integrate evidence, relate the evidence to a
theory or an opinion, - Consider alternative interpretations,
- And reach conclusions that can be defended as
reasonable or plausible.
13Reflective JudgmentKaren Kitchener Patricia
King
- 1-Prereflective Reflective Stages
- (the first 2 stages)
- The right answer always exists.
- No distinction between knowledge and belief, or
belief and evidence. - Examples
- I was brought up to believe that a certain ethnic
group is bad. - If I break a mirror, I will have bad luck.
14Reflective JudgmentKaren Kitchener Patricia
King
- 2-Quasi-Reflective Stages
- (the next 3 stages)
- There is no right and wrong answer.
- Knowledge is subjective.
- Examples
- The unconscious forces may affect personality.
- Environment may influence personality.
- Genetics may influence personality.
-
15Reflective JudgmentKaren Kitchener Patricia
King
- 3-Reflective Thinking Stages
- (the last 2 stages)
- Although somethings cannot be known with
certainty, some judgments are more valid than
others based on evidence. - Examples
- Based on evidence, I believe that the development
of diabetes is genetic.
16What Do You Think?
- Common sense is the best distributed commodity in
the world, for every man is convinced that he is
well supplied with it. - (Rene Descartes)
17Barriers to Reasoning
- 1- Availability Heuristic
- Exaggerating the Improbable
- Estimating the likelihood of events based on
their availability in memory. We assume such
events are common. - Example
- If it happened in the past, then it will happen
now. - I had an accident on the freeway, then I cant
drive on the freeway.
18Barriers to Reasoning
- 2- Representatives Heuristics
- A rule of thumb for judging the likelihood of
things in terms of how well they seem to
represent, or match particular prototypes. - Examples
- Believing that someone is famous or important
because of how well he is dressed.
19Barriers to Reasoning
- 3- Framing and the Tendency to Avoid Loss
- How an issue is framed can significantly
affect decisions and judgments. - Examples
- If you take chemotherapy, youll lose your hair.
(People will respond cautiously) - If you take the medication for high blood
pressure, youll be OK. (People will go for it)
20Barriers to Reasoning
- 4- Confirmation Bias
- Paying attention to information that confirms
ones own belief. - Examples
- Homosexuality is genetic.
- Smoking is not harmful.
- (Regardless of the research)
21Barriers to Reasoning
- 5- Biases Due to Fixation or Mental Sets
- The inability to see a problem from a fresh
perspective. - Examples
- Believing that the medication will not work and
ignoring the doctors advice to take the
medication.
22Barriers to Reasoning
- 6- Biases Due to Functional Fixation
- Our tendency to perceive the functions of
objects as fixed and unchanging. - Examples
- Ransacking the house for a screw driver when a
dime would have turned the screw.
23Barriers to Reasoning
- 7- Overconfidence or The Hindsight Bias
- The tendency to overestimate ones ability to
predict the future. - Examples
- I knew you were going to have a divorce.
24Barriers to Reasoning
- 8- The Need for Cognitive Consistency
- When there is inconsistency between behavior and
belief. (Smoking) - Examples
- Denying the evidence or rationalizing
- Modifying the belief
- Changing the behavior
25Barriers to Reasoning
- 9- Belief Perseverance
- Clinging to ones initial conception after
the basis on which they were formed has been
discredited. Confirmation bias contributes to
belief perseverance. - Examples
- You continue smoking even though research
shows it is definitely connected to lung cancer.
26Language Development
- Stage
- Babbles many speech sounds
- Babbling reveals household language
- One-word stage
- Two-word telegraphic speech
- Language develops rapidly into complete sentences
27Language Development
- Behaviorist, B. F. Skinner
- Rationalist, Noam Chomsky
- Cognitive Scientists, Statistical Learning
28Innate Capacity for LanguageNoam Chomsky
- Surface Structure
- Deep Structure
- Language Acquisition Device
29Language Acquisition DeviceInnate Mental Module
- Children in different cultures go through similar
stages of linguistic development. - Children combine words in ways adults never do.
- Adults dont consistently correct their
childrens syntax. - Even retarded children develop language.
- Infants can derive simple linguistic rules.
30Nature and Nurture
31Language Acquisition
32Thinking and Language
- Does language influence thinking?
- (Linguist Benjamin Lee Whorf)
- Can we think without language?
- (Mental practice)
33Intelligence
- Whats the definition of intelligence?
34Definitions of Intelligence
- The ability to profit from experience
- The ability to acquire knowledge or learn
- The ability to think abstractly
- The ability to act purposefully
- The ability to adapt to changes in the
environment.
35Definitions of Intelligence
- 1-Psychometric Approach
- IQ tests focuses on how people perform on
standardized tests which are designed to measure
skills and knowledge you have already learned. - 2-Cognitive Approach
- Intelligence comes in different ways and one test
cant measure it all.
36Definitions of Intelligence
- Psychometric Approach
- Alfred Binet
- Lewis Terman
- William Stern
- David Wechsler
- Charles Spearman
- Goddard
- Cognitive Approach
- Howard Gardner
- Robert Sternberg
- Emotional Intelligence
37Alfred Binet(1857-1911)
- Designed the 1st test that was developed later
to be what we call now the IQ test. - He wanted to measure the mental age as opposed to
the chronological age. - The scale, properly speaking does not permit the
measure of intelligence, because intellectual
qualities cannot be measured as linear surfaces
are measured. - Binet and Simon, 1905)
38Lewis Terman(1877-1956)
- Revised the test.
- Called the new test the Stanford-Binet.
- Later German Psychologist William Stern derived
the famous intelligence quotient or IQ.
39William SternIQ Scores
- IQ score Mental Age (MA)
- divided by Chronological Age (CA)
- multiplied by 100
40David WechslerIQ Tests
- Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
(WISC-III) - A test for children that provides separate
measures of verbal and performance (nonverbal)
skills as well as a total score. - A test for adults that provides separate measures
of verbal and performance skills as well as a
total score.
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42Charles Spearman(1863-1945)
- General Intelligence
- The g Factor
- There is a general factor that underlies the
specific factors. - Those who score high on one factor, score higher
than average on other factors.
43Bell Curve
44Variation in IQ Scores
45Evaluating IQ Tests
- Example 1 Focus on black-white differences
- Example 2 Goddards testing of the immigrants
on Ellis Island
46Whats Wrong with Goddards Methodology?
- 1- The test was translated from French.
- 2- The translation might not have been accurate.
- 3- The immigrants had just endured an Atlantic
crossing. - 4- The test was interpreted according to the
French norms.
47- standardization reliability
- validity normal curve
- content validity aptitude test
- predictive validity achievement test
48The Cognitive ApproachRobert Sternberg
49Robert Sternberg
- 1- Analytical (academic problem-solving)
intelligence - 2- Creative Intelligence
- 3- Practical Intelligence
- a. change situation (shaping)
- b. work on your emotions (adaptation)
- c. remove yourself from situation (selection)
50The Theory of Multiple IntelligencesHoward
Gardner (1995)
- Language 7
intelligences - Logical-mathematical 2
- Spatial relations Naturalistic
- Bodily-kinesthetic Existential
- Musical
- Interpersonal
- Intrapersonal
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52Savant Syndrome
- A condition in which a person otherwise limited
in mental ability has an exceptional specific
skill, such as in computation or drawing.
53Emotional Intelligence
- 1-Interpersonal Intelligence
- 2-Intrapersonal Intelligence
54Emotional Intelligence
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56Components of Creativity
- The ability to produce novel and valuable ideas
- Expertise
- Imaginative Thinking Skills
- A Venturesome Personality
- Intrinsic Motivation
- A creative Environment
57Facts about Heritability
- Heritability gives an estimate of the proportion
of the total variance in a trait that is
attributable to genetic variation in a group. - The maximun value hiritability can have is 1.0.
- To measure heritability, the populations tested
have to share the same environment. - Even highly heritable traits can be modified by
the environment.