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Myers PSYCHOLOGY 5th Ed

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Title: Myers PSYCHOLOGY 5th Ed


1
Myers PSYCHOLOGY (5th Ed)
  • Chapter 11
  • Intelligence
  • James A. McCubbin, PhD
  • Clemson University
  • Worth Publishers

2
Origins of Intelligence
  • Intelligence Test
  • a method of assessing an individuals mental
    aptitudes and comparing them to those of others,
    using numerical scores

3
Origins of Intelligence
  • Mental Age
  • a measure of intelligence test performance
    devised by Binet
  • chronological age that most typically corresponds
    to a given level of performance
  • child who does as well as the average 8-year-old
    is said to have a mental age of 8

4
Origins of Intelligence
  • Stanford-Binet
  • the widely used American revision of Binets
    original intelligence test
  • revised by Terman at Stanford University

5
Origins of Intelligence
  • Intelligence Quotient (IQ)
  • defined originally the ratio of mental age (ma)
    to chronological age (ca) multiplied by 100
  • IQ ma/ca x 100)
  • on contemporary tests it is the average
    performance for a given age is assigned a score
    of 100

6
What is Intelligence?
  • Intelligence
  • capacity for goal-directed and adaptive behavior
  • involves certain abilities
  • profit from experience
  • solve problems
  • reason effectively

7
What is Intelligence?
  • IQ is a score on a test
  • it is not something you have
  • Is intelligence singular or multiple abilities?
  • Does it relate to speed of brain processing?

8
Intelligence
  • Is intelligence culturally defined?
  • Are intelligence tests culture free?

9
Are There Multiple Intelligences?
  • Factor Analysis
  • statistical procedure that identifies clusters of
    related items (called factors) on a test
  • used to identify different dimensions of
    performance that underlie ones total score
  • General Intelligence (g)
  • factor that Spearman and others believed
    underlies specific mental abilities
  • measured by every task on an intelligence test

10
Are There Multiple Intelligences?
  • Savant Syndrome
  • condition in which a person otherwise limited in
    mental ability has an amazing specific skill
  • computation
  • drawing

11
Are There Multiple Intelligences?
  • Social Intelligence
  • the know-how involved in comprehending social
    situations and managing oneself successfully
  • Emotional Intelligence
  • ability to perceive, express, understand, and
    regulate emotions
  • critical part of social intelligence

12
Brain Function and Intelligence
  • People who can perceive the stimulus very quickly
    tend to score somewhat higher on intelligence
    tests

13
Assessing Intelligence
  • Aptitude Test
  • a test designed to predict a persons future
    performance
  • aptitude is the capacity to learn
  • Achievement Test
  • a test designed to assess what a person has
    learned

14
Assessing Intelligence
  • Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)
  • most widely used intelligence test
  • subtests
  • verbal
  • performance (nonverbal)
  • Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC)
  • similar to WAIS, but for school children

15
Assessing Intelligence- Sample Items from the WAIS
16
Assessing Intelligence
  • Standardization
  • defining meaningful scores by comparison with the
    performance of a pretested standardization
    group
  • Normal Curve
  • the symmetrical bell-shaped curve that describes
    the distribution of many physical and
    psychological attributes
  • most scores fall near the average, and fewer and
    fewer scores lie near the extremes

17
The Normal Curve
18
Getting Smarter?
  • Intelligence test performance has been rising

19
Assessing Intelligence
  • Reliability
  • the extent to which a test yields consistent
    results
  • assessed by consistency of scores on
  • two halves of the test
  • alternate forms of the test
  • retesting the same individual
  • Validity
  • the extent to which a test measures or predicts
    what it is suppose to

20
Assessing Intelligence
  • Content Validity
  • the extent to which a test samples the behavior
    that is of interest
  • driving test that samples driving tasks
  • Criterion
  • behavior (such as college grades) that a test
    (such as the SAT) is designed to predict
  • the measure used in defining whether the test has
    predictive validity

21
Assessing Intelligence
  • Predictive Validity
  • success with which a test predicts the behavior
    it is designed to predict
  • assessed by computing the correlation between
    test scores and the criterion behavior
  • also called criterion-related validity

22
Assessing Intelligence
  • As the range of data under consideration narrows,
    its predictive power diminishes.
  • Therefore, the predictive power of aptitude tests
    scores diminish as students move up the
    educational ladder.

23
The Dynamics of Intelligence
  • Mental Retardation
  • a condition of limited mental ability
  • indicated by intelligence scores below 70
  • produces difficulty in adapting to the demands of
    life
  • varies from mild to profound

24
The Dynamics of Intelligence
  • Down syndrome
  • retardation and associated physical disorders
    caused by an extra chromosome in genetic make-up

25
The Dynamics of Intelligence
Profound Below 20
1-2 Require
constant aid and supervision.
26
The Dynamics of Intelligence
  • Creativity
  • the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas
  • components of creativity
  • expertise
  • imaginative thinking skills
  • venturesome personality
  • intrinsic motivation
  • creative environment

27
Genetic Influences
  • The most genetically similar people have the most
    similar scores

28
Genetic Influences
  • Heritability
  • the proportion of variation among individuals
    that we can attribute to genes
  • variability depends on range of populations and
    environments studied

29
Genetic Influences
  • Group differences and environmental impact

30
Genetic Influences
  • The Mental Rotation Test of Spatial Abilities
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