Title: Intelligence
1Intelligence
2What is intelligence?
Where does it come from?
How can it be measured?
3What is Intelligence?
- Some definitions
- Binet defined intelligence as an individuals
capacity to - Find and maintain a definite direction or purpose
- Adjust strategy as necessary to achieve that
purpose - Evaluate or criticize that strategy so
adjustments could be made - Wechsler
- The aggregate or global capacity of an individual
to act purposefully, think rationally, and deal
effectively with the environment - Kaplan and Saccuzzo
- General potential independent of prior learning
4Spearmans Theory of General Mental Ability
g
5Cattel Horns Theory of Intelligence
g
Fluid Abilities
Crystallized Abilities
Verbal Reasoning
Quantitative Reasoning
Abstract Visual Reasoning
Vocabulary test Comprehension test Absurdities
test Verbal relations test
Quantitative test Number series test Equation
building test
Pattern analysis test Copying test Matrices
test Paper folding cutting test
6Sternbergs Triarchic Theory
7Gardners Multiple Intelligences
- Logical-mathematical
- Linguistic
- Musical
- Spatial
- Bodily-kinesthetic
- Interpersonal
- Intrapersonal
- Naturalist
8History of Intelligence Testing
- First intelligence tests were devised by Francis
Galton - In 1905, Binet developed test to measure childs
mental age - Lewis Terman revised the Binet scale to produce
the Stanford-Binet (introduced IQ) - Weschler (1939) published improved measure for
adults (introduced deviation IQ)
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10Intelligence Testing Today
- Intelligence tests contain diverse mix of
questions assessing abstract reasoning - Use modern deviation IQ scores normed for age
- Typically M100 SD15
- IQ scores vary across testings but intelligence
tests have high reliability - Intelligence tests have demonstrated limited
validity - IQ tests are not widely used in non-Western
cultures
11Where Does Intelligence Come From?
- Nature (Hereditary)
- Twin studies
- Adopted children
- Heritability ratios
- Nurture (Environment)
- Adoption studies
- Environmental deprivation
- Environmental enrichment
- Generational increases
- Interaction Model
- Intelligence influence by both factors
- Heredity and environment also interact
- Reaction range model
12Cultural Differences in IQ Scores
- Average IQ scores for large minorities is
somewhat lower than the average for whites - Jensen and others argue these differences result
from heredity - Kamins rebuttal
- Socioeconomic disadvantage
- Cultural test bias
- Mercer (1975) IQ argued tests measure ability and
assimilation into mainstream culture - Not much empirical evidence that this is a problem
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