Title: Cognition and mental abilities
1Cognition and mental abilities
2contents
- Thought
- Problem solving
- Decision making
- Intelligence
3Building blocks of thought
4Language
- Language A flexible system of communication
that uses sounds, rules, gestures, or symbols to
convey information.
5Language
- Phonemes the basic sounds that make up any
language. - Morphemes the smallest meaningful units of
speech, such as simple words, prefixes, and
suffixes. - Grammar the language rules that determine how
sounds and words can be combined and used to
communicate meaning within a language.
6Images and concepts
- Images A mental representation of a sensory
experience. - Concepts A mental category for classifying
objects, people, or experiences.
7Problem solving
- Problem representation the first step in solving
a problem it involves interpreting or defining
the problems.
8Divergent and convergent thinking
- Divergent thinking Thinking that meets the
criteria of originality, inventiveness, and
flexibility. - Convergent thinking Thinking that is directed
toward one correct solution to a problem.
9Obstacles to solving problems
- Mental set The tendency to perceive and to
approach problems in certain ways. - Functional fixedness The tendency to perceive
only a limited number of uses for an object, thus
interfering with the process of problem solving.
10Two problems
11Decision making
- Compensatory model A rational decision-making
model in which choices are systematically
evaluated on various criteria.
12Decision-making heuristic
- Representiveness A heuristic by which a new
situation is judged on the basis of its
resemblance to a stereotypical model. - Availability A heuristic by which a judgment
or decision is based on information that is most
easily retrieved from memory. - Confirmation bias the tendency to look for
evidence in support of a belief and to ignore
evidence that would disprove a belief.
13Intelligence
- Intelligence a general term referring to the
ability or abilities involved in learning and
adaptive behavior.
14Theories of intelligence
- Triarchic theory of intelligence Sternbergs
theory that intelligence involves mental skills,
insight and creative adaptability, and
environmental responsiveness.
15Theories of intelligence
- Theory of multiple intelligence Howard
Gardners theory that there is not one
intelligence, but rather many intelligences, each
of which is relatively independent of the others.
16The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
- The first test developed to measure intelligence
was designed by two Frenchmen, Alfred Binet and
Theodore Simon. The test , first used in Paris in
1905, was designed to identify children who might
have difficulty in school.
17The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
- The first Binet-Simon Scale consisted of 30 tests
arranged in order of increasing difficulty. With
each child, the examiner started with the
earliest tests and worked down the test until the
child could not longer answer questions.
18Mental age
- A child who scores as well as an average
4-year-old has a mental age of 4. - A child who scores as well as an average
12-year-old has a mental age of 12.
19Intelligence tests
- Intelligence quotient a numerical value given
to intelligence that is determined from the
scores on an intelligence test on the basis of a
score of 100 for average intelligence.
20Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
- The current one is designed to measure four kinds
of mental abilities - Verbal reasoning abstract/visual reasoning,
quantitative reasoning, and short-term memory.
Test items vary with the subjects age.
21Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
- A 3-year-old might be asked to describe the
purpose of a cup and to name objects such as a
chair and a key. - A 6-year-old might be asked to define words such
as orange and envelope and complete a sentence
such as An inch is short a mile is __ . - A 12-year-old might be asked to define skill and
juggler and to complete the sentence the
streams are dry___ there has been little rain
22Welchsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Third Edition
(WAIS-III)
- An individual intelligence test developed
especially for adults measures both verbal and
performance abilities. - The WAIS was developed in the late 1930s by David
Welchsler.
23Welchsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Third Edition
(WAIS-III)
- The WAIS-III is divided into two parts, one
stressing verbal skills, the other performance
skills.
24Verbal skills
- The verbal scale includes tests of information (
Who wrote Paradise Lost? ) - tests of simple arithmetic (Sam had three pieces
of candy, and Joe gave him four more. How many
pieces of candy did Sam have then?) - Tests of comprehension ( What should you do if
you see someone forget a book on a bus?)
25Performance skills
- The performance scale also measures routine
tasks. People are asked find the missing part
, to copy patterns, and to arrange three to five
pictures so that they tell a story.
26Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Third
Edition (WISC-III)
- An individual intelligence test developed
especially for school-aged children measures
verbal and performance abilities and also yields
an overall IQ score.
27Group tests
- Written intelligence tests administered by one
examiner to many people at one time.
28The end