Perspectives on Intelligence Unit 9 Lecture 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Charles Spearman

A
  • The idea that intelligence should be thought of as a single trait
  • He developed a technique called Factor Analysis
    Ex) Imagine having a measure for the physical dimensions for a bunch of people. You might have measures of head, foot, hand size, weight circumference etc. If all of these measures correlate with one another, it might be sensible to think that some general variable underlies all of them. If so all of these members could be captured by a single number that represents the general trait of body size.
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2
Q

(G) or GIF

A

General Intelligence Factor (or g)

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3
Q

General Intelligence Factor (or g)

A
  • Represents their degree of mental energy, brain power
    Ex) The blue ovals represents children’s performance on different academic subjects that are correlated to justify thinking that one factor, called g, underlies them all
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4
Q

Things that are correlated with g

A
The General Intelligence Factor (g), as measured by IQ tests has a .50 correlation with high school and university grades
IQ scores are also correlated with:
Lifetime Earnings
# of years of education
Lifespan
Perceptual Judgment Speed
Capacity for Impulse Control
Success in Finding a job
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5
Q

G is not perfectly correlated with different _________

A

academic skills

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6
Q

What is the definition for what Spearman called s?

A

The part of children’s performance on different academic subjects that don’t correlate with one another

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7
Q

s represents what?

A

Individual’s subject-specific levels of intelligence

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8
Q

Louis Thurstone

A

Investigated the concept of g more carefully and identified that it was made up of seven independent clusters of primary mental abilities.

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9
Q

Lois Thurston came up with what 7 mental abilities?

A
  • Word Fluency, Verbal Comprehension, Numeric Abilities, Spatial Visualization, Memory, Perceptual Speed, Reasoning
  • ## They are distinct from one and other but also related to one and other.
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10
Q

Hierarchical Model of Intelligence

A

A the top of the hierarchy there is g (general intelligence factor)
The second level represents Thurstone’s 7 Primary Mental Abilities
The lowest level represents subject specific intelligence

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11
Q

Fluid Intelligence (Gf)

A
  • The ease by which we can learn new information and find solutions to unfamiliar problems
  • Refers to our potential for learning new things and adapting to novelty
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12
Q

Crystallized Intelligence (Gc)

A

Our ability to use our past experience and knowledge we have already acquired to complete tasks.

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13
Q

Robert Sternberg

A

Tried to capture forms of intelligence that were different from the ones that promote success in academic settings

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14
Q

The Triarchic Theory of Intelligence

A
  1. Analytical (Books Smarts)
    The academic, “g type” of intelligence that most intelligence tests measure
  2. Practical (Street Smarts)
    Flexible problem solving in the real world beyond the classroom
  3. Creative (Creativity)
    The ability to solve completely new problems and to generate unique ideas
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15
Q

Howard Gardner

A

Noted the existence of savants

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16
Q

Savant

A

People who are extraordinarily gifted and skilled in specific areas, like music, mathematics but seemingly lack skill in most other domains (Such as in social interactions or reasoning ability)

17
Q

Howard Gardner came up with 8 unique and independent types of intelligence theories of intelligences

A
  1. Verbal/Linguistic
  2. Logical/Mathematical
  3. Visual/Spatial
  4. Existentialist
  5. Interpersonal
  6. Intrapersonal
  7. Bodily/Kinesthetic
  8. Musical/Rhythmic
18
Q

Learning Styles

A

The idea that children differ in their intellectual strengths and weakness.

19
Q

False Negative Stereotypes

A

Ex) Study at U of Waterloo revealed that female participants who are told that a math test resulted in poorer scores for females than for males, led female participants to perform worse on the test than male participants.