Title: Intelligence 2
1Intelligence 2
2IMPORTANT Upcoming Test
- one week from today
- Thursday January 29
- in class, NatSci 1, at 1200-150
- worth 10 of course grade
- 40 multiple choice questions
- Test Yourself questions give you some idea of
what to expect - A few sample test questions will be posted on the
web on Tuesday - Material covered
- Motivation lectures and Chapter 6 assigned FQs
- Reasoning Intelligence lectures and Chapter 10
assigned FQs - Note I recently removed Ch. 10, FQ10
(heritability coefficient) from the assigned FQs
-- it will NOT be tested - NOT Language and Nonverbal Communication nor
associated FQs (Ch 10, FQ 37-40)
3Three Minute Review
- REASONING
- Deductive reasoning
- Given a set of premises, draw a conclusion
- series problems
- syllogisms
- mental models (see text)
- Inductive reasoning
- See examples and make hypotheses to explain the
situation/pattern - Sherlock Holmes
- Errors
- representativeness overvalued (base rate
undervalued) - availability bias
- number of examples encountered biases probability
estimates - confirmation bias
- people try to prove rather than disprove their
hypothesis - Insight
- breaking out of mental sets
- avoiding functional fixedness
- Kohlers chimps had insight apparently crows do
too
4- INTELLIGENCE
- Is there one type of intelligence?
- What practical applications have IQ tests been
used for? - IQ scores
- bell curve (normal) distribution
- mean 100
- SD 15
5Test Yourself
- Suppose a researcher gave subjects the following
type of problem In a group of 100 people, 70 are
pilots and 30 are bookkeepers. Of that group,
one man is meek, timid, and enjoys helping
people. Is he more likely to be a pilot or a
bookkeeper? Most subjects would answer - bookkeeper, demonstrating a bias toward
representativeness. - bookkeeper, demonstrating a prior probability
bias. - pilot, demonstrating use of the base-rate
information given. - pilot, demonstrating the availability bias.
- bookkeeper, demonstrating functional fixedness
6Intelligence Video
- Discovering Psychology (Zimbardo series) Testing
and Intelligence
- What is the average IQ?
- What roles did the following people play in the
history of intelligence testing - Francis Galton
- Alfred Binet
- Lewis Terman (at Stanford)
- David Wechsler
- What are the following characteristics and why
are they valuable in a test? - validity
- reliability
- standardization
- Why is intelligence testing so controversial?
Why might intelligence tests be biased to a
particular group? - Is there only one type of intelligence? What
types of intelligence have been proposed by
modern psychologists (particularly Howard Gardner
and Robert Sternberg)?
7Is there one type of intelligence?
Charles Spearman 1863-1945
- Factor analysis
- developed by Spearman to tease apart components
of intelligence - are there clusters of correlations that suggest
common underlying factors?
8Factor Analysis
CORRELATION
CORRELATION MATRIX
Coke Classic Dr. Pepper 7-UP Ginger Ale
Coke Classic --- .70 .65 .75
Dr. Pepper --- --- .59 .51
7-UP --- --- --- .68
Ginger Ale --- --- --- ---
Coke Classic Dr. Pepper 7-UP Ginger Ale
Coke Classic --- .70 .20 .33
Dr. Pepper --- --- .16 .18
7-UP --- --- --- .77
Ginger Ale --- --- --- ---
9General Intelligence Spearmans g
g
- Spearman suggested that scores on each subtest
were determined by two factors - g-factor (general intelligence)
- a general factor contributing to all tests
- s-factor (specific factors)
- factors that are specific to a particular test
(e.g., arithmetic vs. spatial tests)
10What might g be?
- mental speed and working memory?
- computer analogy faster processor and more RAM
- significant correlations between reaction times
and IQ (r -.35) - neural efficiency?
- mental quickness may expand capacity of working
memory - mental self-government?
- computer analogy better operating system
11Duncans g-spot
- lateral prefrontal cortex
- activated by high-g versions of multiple
intelligence tests
Non-intelligence control task
Hannibal Lecter You see, the brain itself feels
no pain, Clarice, if that concerns you. For
example, Paul won't miss this little piece here,
which is the, uh, part of the prefrontal lobe
which they say is the seat of good manners.
12Cattells Two-factor theory
- Cattell suggested two main factors in intelligence
13Cattells Two-factor theory
Fluid Intelligence
- Ability to perceive relationships independent of
previous experience - Examples matrix reasoning, object assembly
- Ability peaks around age 20-25, then declines
Raymond Cattell 1905-1998
Crystallized Intelligence
- Mental ability derived directly from previous
experience. - Examples vocabulary, information
- Ability increases over the lifetime (esp. in an
intellectually stimulating environment) - Less influenced by alcohol consumption and brain
damage
- Correlation between Fluid Crystallized
Intelligence? r .60
14Does IQ Count?
Worlds highest IQ
Not worlds highest IQ
George W. Bush IQ estimated at 91 Worlds most
powerful job
Marilyn Vos Savant IQ 228 Writes magazine advice
column Ask Marilyn
Estimates for other presidents Bill Clinton 182
Jimmy Carter 176 John F. Kennedy 174 Richard
Nixon 155 Ronald Reagan 105 George Bush Sr. 99
15Does IQ Predict Performance?
- socioeconomic status of parents is a better
predictor of achievement than by IQ (education,
connections?) - better IQ better performance (r 0.2 - 0.4)
- prediction is better for new than experienced
employees
16How to appear to have improved your IQ!!
Judging IQ from short videos
- Speak quickly, understandably, with lots of words
- you seem bright, you are bright
- Usin slang, saying um, being overweight
- you seem less bright, but not related
- Talking loudly, using proper English,
- you seem bright, but not related
Judgments based on just voice more accurate
17The Cynics View
- Intelligence is what intelligence tests test.
18Are there other types of intelligence?
- Savant Stephen Wiltshire
- autistic
- took much effort to gain minimal language skills
- could reproduce highly accurate drawings of
buildings and places years after having only
glanced at them - had book of his artwork published
19Is IQ hereditary?The Sereno siblings
Marty neuroscientist (vision)
Paul paleontologist
Joan linguist
Margaret neuroscientist (vision)
Anne neuroscientist (vision)
Sara neuroscientist (language)
- six siblings, all talented academic scientists
- parents artist and educator mother and engineer
and closet-scientist father - genes or environment?
20Is IQ hereditary?
21(No Transcript)
22Flynn EffectIQ has increased over time
- Why?
- genes dont change that rapidly
- not likely to be extra schooling because more
scholastic tests have shown smallest increases - more stimulating and complex environments and
societies? - better prenatal care and nutrition?
23Nature vs. Nurture(or Nativism vs. Empricism)
- Are differences between people due to
environmental or genetic differences? - Misunderstanding the question
- Is a persons intelligence due more to genes or
to environment? - no genes no intelligence
- bad environment little intelligence
- both genes intelligence crucial for any trait
24Faulty Question
Which contributes more to the area of a desk top?
The length of the desk or the width?