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Chapter TwentyOne

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Title: Chapter TwentyOne


1
Chapter Twenty-One
  • Middle Adulthood
  • Cognitive Development

PowerPoints prepared by Cathie Robertson,
Grossmont College Revised by Jenni Fauchier
Metropolitan Community College
2
What is Intelligence?
  • For most of twentieth century, scientists and
    public assumed there was such a thing as
    intelligence, with general intelligence thought
    to be a single entity
  • Now scientists believe it is more useful to look
    at adult intelligence as several distinct
    intellectual capacities

3
Studying Intelligence During the Twentieth Century
  • Psychometricians disagreed about whether general
    intelligence rises or falls after age 20 or so

4
Cross-Sectional Research
  • For first half of the twentieth century,
    psychologists were convinced, based on solid
    evidence, that intelligence declined over time
  • a classic cross-sectional study found that the
    average male
  • reached his intellectual peak at about age 18
  • intellectual decline began in mid-20s
  • hundreds of other cross-sectional studies in many
    nations also found younger adults outscored older
    adults on measures of intelligence

5
Longitudinal Research
  • In 1955, Nancy Bayley and Melita Oden analyzed
    adult intelligence of child geniuses who had
    grown up
  • Found that most of the 36-year-olds were still
    improving in vocabulary, comprehension, and
    information
  • Bayley wondered whether this groups high
    intelligence during childhood had protected them
    from age-related decline

6
Longitudinal Research, cont.
  • After further research, Bayley concluded
  • intellectual learning is unimpaired through age
    36 and beyond
  • Longitudinal research showed that, over time,
    intellectual growth resulted from
  • improvements in quality and extent of public
    education
  • variety of cultural opportunities
  • expanded media information

7
Longitudinal Research, cont.
  • Bayleys research also showed
  • older adults previously tested often did not go
    beyond 8th grade and so did not fully develop
    their intelligence
  • each generation scores higher on IQ tests because
    each is better educated

8
The Flynn Effect
  • Evidence for the Flynn effecta trend toward
    increasing average IQ over generationscomes from
    research comparing test scores over time
  • in every country, younger cohorts outscored older
    ones
  • because of Flynn effect, widely-used IQ tests
    are renormed about every 15 years

9
The Flynn Effect, cont.
  • Reasons for overall IQ rise
  • wider education and experience
  • better nutrition
  • fewer toxins
  • smaller family size

10
Cross-Sequential Research
  • Longitudinal research better than
    cross-sectional, but still not perfect
  • Schaie combined the two, his new design is called
    cross-sequential research
  • he tested cross-section of 500 adults of
    different age groups on 5 standard primary mental
    abilities foundations of intelligence
  • verbal meaning, spatial orientation, inductive
    reasoning, number ability, and word fluency

11
Cross-Sequential Research, cont.
  • Schaie concluded people improve in most mental
    abilities until their 80s, at which point they
    fall below the mid-range performance of young
    adults
  • Research in many nations confirmed Schaies
    general conclusion for example, that of Baltes

12
Components of Intelligence Many and Varied
  • Developmentalists are now looking at patterns of
    gains and losses in intellect over the adult
    years
  • How many abilities are there? We will look at 4
    different proposals

13
Two Clusters Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence
  • Fluid Intelligence
  • flexible reasoning used to draw inferences,
    understand relations between concepts, and
    speedily process new ideas
  • person with this intelligence would be quick and
    creative with words and numbers, as well as enjoy
    intellectual puzzles
  • a test item for it might ask what comes next in
    each series? BDACZBYA 456345623456

14
Two Clusters Fluid and Crystallized
Intelligence, cont.
  • Crystallized Intelligence
  • accumulation of facts, information, and knowledge
    that comes with education and experiences within
    a particular culture
  • a sample item to test for this might be what
    would you do with a mango?

15
Three Forms of Intelligence Sternberg
  • Analytic
  • mental processes that foster academic proficiency
    by making possible efficient learning,
    remembering, and thinking
  • involves abstract planning, strategy selection,
    focused attention, and information processing

16
Three Forms of Intelligence Sternberg, cont.
  • Creative Intelligence
  • involves capacity to be intellectually flexible
    and innovative in new situations
  • divergent diverse, innovative, and unusual
    solutions

17
Three Forms of Intelligence Sternberg, cont.
  • Practical Intelligence
  • involves capacity to adapt ones behavior to the
    contextual demands of a given situation
  • includes accurate grasp of expectations and needs
    of people involved and an awareness of skills
    needed

18
Five Primary Abilities
  • Schaie found 5 primary abilities
  • verbal meaning
  • spatial orientation
  • inductive reasoning
  • word fluency
  • number ability this, unlike other 4 that
    increases from age 20 to the late 50s, shifts
    downward by age 40
  • After age 60, decreases small but statistically
    significant
  • cohort effect was found

19
Eight Intelligences Gardner
  • Intelligences for
  • linguistic
  • logical-mathematical
  • musical
  • spatial
  • body-kinesthetic
  • naturalistic
  • social understanding (interpersonal)
  • self-understanding (intrapersonal)

20
Gardners Eight Intelligences, cont.
  • Gardner believes most people have capacity to
    achieve minimal proficiency in each, but that
    every person is more gifted in some abilities
    than in others

21
Gardners Eight Intelligences, cont.
  • Measuring intelligence reflects assumptions about
    what is measured also cultures and families
    value different intelligences
  • psychometricians fears that most intelligence
    tests are valid measures of verbal and logical
    skills of North Americans, but not necessarily of
    people in other cultures

22
Culture and Abilities
  • Cultural assumptions about aging affect concepts
    of intelligence and development of intelligence
    test
  • U.S. culture values youth and devalues age
  • abilities of youth (quick reaction time, etc.)
    are central to psychometric intelligence tests
  • strengths of older adults (recognizing and
    upholding traditions, etc.) not as valued

23
Culture and Abilities, cont.
  • Psychometric evaluation of adult intelligence
    must consider cultural background of person and
    assumptions of test authors
  • culture becomes increasingly important when
    evaluating abilities of people as they age
  • Education is a cultural manifestation

24
Selective Gains and Losses
  • Many researchers believe that adults make
    deliberate choices about their intellectual
    development, separate from their culture or
    education

25
Optimization with Compensation
  • Paul and Margaret Baltes developed theory called
    selective optimization with compensation
  • people try to maintain a balance in their lives
    by looking for the best way to compensate for
    physical and cognitive losses
  • try to become more proficient at activities they
    do well

26
Optimization with Compensation, cont.
  • When selective optimization with compensation is
    applied to cognition
  • cognitive skills and achievements can be broken
    down into discrete components to maximize gains
    and minimize losses
  • Cognition as Expertise

27
What Is Expert Cognition?
  • Expertsomeone notably more skilled and
    knowledgeable than average person is about a
    specific intellectual topic or practical ability
  • Expert Thought
  • intuitive
  • automatic
  • strategic
  • flexible

28
Intuitive
  • Compared to novices, actions of experts are
    intuitive and less stereotypic
  • experts rely on accumulated experiences and
    immediate context

29
Automatic
  • Many aspects of expert performance are automatic
  • incoming information is processed more quickly
    and analyzed more efficiently
  • experts then act in well-rehearsed ways that make
    their efforts seem nonconscious

30
Strategic
  • Experts distinguished by use of strategies
  • have better strategies and more of them
  • superior strategies allow for more selective
    optimization with compensation

31
Flexible
  • Experts are more flexible
  • derives from their actions being intuitive,
    automatic, and strategic
  • also comes from their being creative and curious,
    deliberately experimenting and enjoying the
    challenge when things dont go as planned

32
Expertise and Age
  • Practice is crucial
  • Motivation is crucial
  • Expertise can sometimes overcome effects of age,
    but response time slower

33
Expertise on the Job
  • Research on cognitive plasticity often shows the
    use of selective optimization with compensation
  • especially apparent in the everyday workplace
  • Complicated work requires more cognitive practice
    and expertise than does routine work

34
Waiting on Tables
  • Waiting on tables in a restaurant demands a wide
    range of cognitive skills
  • memory for orders
  • knowledge of menu items
  • delivery procedures
  • simultaneous management of several tables, each
    at a different stage of meal
  • ability to organize and prioritize tasks

35
Waiting on Tables, cont.
  • Cognitive skills involved in waiting on tables,
    cont.
  • ability to monitor of social relations of
    customers and coworkers
  • physical stamina
  • Perlmutter studied restaurant workers and found
  • older employees outperformed younger ones had
    developed strategies to compensate for declining
    job-related abilities

36
Working in an Office
  • Similar results for office workers were found by
    Salthouse
  • Strategies are found by older workers to perform
    work that can accommodate cognitive changes

37
Expertise in Daily Life
  • Developing expertise to cope with stress

38
The Stresses of Life
  • Middle-aged adults in the thick of things
  • parents to teens, children of aging parents, and
    responsible at work
  • role overload needs strategies to deal with the
    stress that is everywhere
  • Stressorscircumstances or events that damage a
    persons physical or psychological well-being

39
Ways of Coping with Stress
  • A stress may be ignored or considered important
    enough to be viewed as a challenge, not a threat
  • no damage to body from response to stress
  • Psychologists have differentiated 2 major ways of
    coping with stress
  • problem-focused copingattacking problem
  • emotion-focused copingchanging feelings about
    the stress
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