Chapter 7: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
Advertisements

Myers’ EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (5th Ed)
Thinking, Language and Intelligence. Cognition Mental Activities Acquiring, retaining and using knowledge THINKING!
1 Intelligence Chapter What is Intelligence? Intelligence (in all cultures) is the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use our.
Validity Validity – A property exhibited by a test that measures what it purports to measure. Face Validity – Measures whether a test looks like it tests.
Intelligence. Evolution of the Concept of Intelligence Chinese tests for civil service. Chinese tests for civil service. Galton (mid 1800s)—speed of sensory.
Chapter 6 Thinking & Intelligence 2 of 28 Topics to Explore 1.Problem Solving 2.Thinking Under Uncertainty 3.Intelligence.
Thinking and Intelligence. Thought Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation of mental representations.
Genetics vs. Environment
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall8-1 Thinking, Language, and Intelligence Chapter 8.
Unit 11. * intelligence: * aggregate or global capacity * to act purposefully * to think rationally * to deal effectively with the environment * fluid.
Chapter 7 Thinking, Language, and Intelligence. Cognition.
Cognitive Psychology: Thinking, Intelligence, and Language
Thinking, Language, and Intelligence. Thought Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation.
Chapter 7: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence. Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation.
Testing and Individual Differences pt. 2 Intelligence What makes us smart? Or not so smart? cantrip.org.
Intelligence Chapter 7. Intelligence  The global capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with the environment.  Not necessarily,
Intelligence CHAPTER 16 LESSONS 16.1 Measuring Intelligence
Testing & Intelligence Principal Types of Tests –Personality –Mental ability Intelligence tests – potential for general mental ability Aptitude – potential.
Thursday, October 22 Objective: Compare and contrast learning theories.
Testing. Psychological Tests  Tests abilities, interests, creativity, personality, behavior  Must be standardized, reliable, and valid  Timing, instructions,
Thinking, Concepts & Creativity. Thought Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation of mental.
Intelligence sample IQ questions sample IQ questions What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
What makes us intelligent?. The ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge to adapt to new situations. Is socially constructed.
Intelligence What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent.
Chapter 7: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence. Thought Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation.
Intelligence A concept, not a “thing.” Intelligence – Mental quality consisting of the ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and use knowledge.
Intelligence.
VARIATIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL ATTRIBUTES .
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
Chapter 7: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
Thinking, Language and Concepts
Interactive Topic Test
Unit 11: Testing and Individual Differences
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Testing and Individual Differences pt. 2 Intelligence
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
Genetics vs. Environment
Intelligence and Intelligence Testing
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY Intelligence Worth Publishers.
Cognitive Processes: Thinking and Problem Solving
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY Unit 11 Intelligence Chris Dunn Spalding High School.
EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY Unit 6 – Part 2 Intelligence Ms. Markham.
Chapter 7 THINKING AND INTELLIGENCE
Click your to advance.
History: defining & measuring intelligence
Intelligence.
Intelligence and Intelligence Testing
Cognition and mental abilities
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
Genetics vs. Environment
Psychology in Action (8e) by Karen Huffman
What makes us smart? Or not so smart?
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
Thinking & Problem Solving
Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
DO NOW… How would you define “intelligence?”.
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed)
Modules 25-28: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
Testing and Individual Differences
UNIT-IV BA- II SEM By: Dr DIVYA MONGA
Module 13 Intelligence.
What makes us intelligent Or Not so intelligent
History: defining & measuring intelligence
What’s it all about? Nature = Behaviours, motivation, emotions, etc, that are essentially biological and that we were born with (inherited). Nurture =
Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
Nature vs. Nurture in IQ Are differences between people due to environmental or genetic differences? Misunderstanding the question “Is a person’s intelligence.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 7: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence

Thought Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation of mental representations to draw inferences and conclusions Mental image—representation of objects or events that are not present

Concepts Concept—mental category of objects or ideas based on shared properties Formal concept—mental category formed by learning rules Natural concept—mental category formed by everyday experience

Examples of Concepts Formal concept—follows rigid rules, not usually intuitive (definition of a polygon) Natural concept—results from everyday experience (name some vehicles)

Problem-Solving Strategies Algorithm y + z = r2

Problem-Solving Strategies Heuristic—strategy that involves following a general rule of thumb to reduce the number of possible solutions

Insight and Intuition Insight—sudden realization of how a problem can be solved Intuition—coming to a conclusion without conscious awareness of the thought processes involved

Functional Fixedness type of mental set inability to see an object as having a function other than its usual one key words: functional fixedness; mental set; problem solving Some examples of overcoming functional fixedness include: 1. Using a dime to unscrew something when a screwdriver cannot be found. 2. Using a book to prop open a door when a doorstop cannot be found. 3. Before a baseball game, a rainstorm occurred. They wanted to dry the field a little before beginning play, so they had a helicopter hover above the field, and the rotating helicopter blades acted as a fan and helped dry up the field.

Nine Dots Problem Without lifting your pencil or retracing any line, draw four straight lines that connect all nine dots key words: mental sets; problem solving; nine dots problem

Nine Dots Mental Set Most people will not draw lines that extend from the square formed by the nine dots To solve the problem, you have to break your mental set key words: mental sets; problem solving; nine dots problem

Mounting Candle Problem Using only the objects present on the right, attach the candle to the bulletin board in such a way that the candle can be lit and will burn properly key words: functional fixedness, mental set; problem solving Although students can work on this problem by simply thinking and visualizing a solution in their heads, this demonstration works better by by bringing the actual materials to class and doing a live demonstration with your students, letting them attemtp to solve the problem through trial and error. To do this task you need the folllowing materials: 1. a cork bulletin board 2. a book of matches 3. a candle 4. a BOX of thumbtacks - make sure you keep the thumbtacks in a BOX - also make sure the thumbtacks aren't too big that they can pass through your candle. The smaller the thumb tack, the better

Answer to Candle Problem Most people do not think of using the box for anything other than its normal use (to hold the tacks) To solve the problem, you have to overcome functional fixedness key words: functional fixedness; mental sets; problem solving

Mental Set Q: Why couldn’t you solve the previous problems? A: Mental set—a well-established habit of perception or thought

Decision Making Single-feature model—make a decision by focusing on only one feature Additive model—systematically evaluate the important features of each alternative Elimination by aspects model—rate choices based on features; eliminate those that do not meet the desired criteria, despite other desirable characteristics

Availability Heuristic Judge probability of an event by how easily you can recall previous occurrences of that event. Most people will overestimate deaths from natural disasters because disasters are frequently on TV. Most people will underestimate deaths from asthma because they don’t make the local news. key words: availability heuristic

Representative Heuristic Judge probability of an event based on how it matches a prototype Can be good But can also lead to errors Most will overuse this strategy key words: representativeness heuristic

Language Language and thinking Language and social perception Language and gender bias Animal communication

Language and Thinking Language is a system for combining arbitrary symbols to produce an infinite number of meaningful statements. The linguistic relativity hypothesis is the notion that differences among languages cause differences in the thoughts of their speakers.

Animal Communication Animals clearly communicate with each other, but is that language? Some trained primates demonstrate the same level of language comprehension as that of an average 2-year-old child. Nonprimates can also acquire some language abilities (e.g., dolphins, parrots).

Intelligence The global capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with the environment.

Measuring Intelligence Alfred Binet Mental age Chronological age IQ—comparison of people in similar age groups Hockenbury Discovering psy p257

Alfred Binet (1857–1911) Intelligence—collection of higher-order mental abilities loosely related to one another Did not rank “normal” students according to the scores Intelligence is nurtured Binet-Simon Test developed in France, 1905

Modern Intelligence Tests The Stanford-Binet Scale modification of the original Binet-Simon after it came to the United States intelligence quotient (IQ)—child’s mental age divided by child’s chronological age still used widely in the United States, but not as much as in the past

Modern Intelligence Tests The Wechsler tests used more widely now than Stanford-Binet modeled after Binet’s, also made adult test - WISC-III for children - WAIS-III for adults

Qualities of Good Tests Standardized—administered to large groups of people under uniform conditions to establish norms Reliable—ability to produce consistent results when administered on repeated occasions under similar conditions Valid—ability to measure what the test is intended to measure

Standardized Scoring of Wechsler Tests All raw scores converted to standardized scores Normal distribution Mean of 100 Standard deviation of 15 figure taken from CD-ROM, Gray text, pg. 363, figure 10.5

How Valid Are IQ tests? Validity—test measures what it’s intended to measure Does test correlate with other measures of same construct? School achievement IQ tests (i.e., S-B and the Wechsler) correlate highly BUT they were designed to test what you learn in school Prestigious positions On-the-job performance and other work-related variables

What Do IQ Tests Measure About Your Mind? Mental speed and span of working memory typically use a digit span test to measure this more recent studies find significant correlations between reaction times and IQ scores Why is this important? mental quickness may expand capacity of working memory I have already used digit span tests in my lectures during the memory chapter, but an instructor who has not done so may choose to include a demonstration of digit span/working memory here.

Theories of Intelligence Charles Spearman—g factor Louis Thurstone—intelligence as a person’s “pattern” of mental abilities Howard Gardner—multiple intelligences Robert Sternberg—triarchic theory

Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences

Robert Sternberg Analytic intelligence—mental processes used in learning how to solve problems Creative intelligence—the ability to deal with novel situations by drawing on existing skills and knowledge Practical intelligence—the ability to adapt to the environment (street smarts)

Nature Versus Nurture in IQ Are differences between people due to environmental or genetic differences? Misunderstanding the question “Is a person’s intelligence due more to genes or to environment?” both genes and intelligence crucial for any trait Clearly, IQ is not the only psychological construct for which this debate applies, and instructors may wish to take a moment to name the other areas (i.e., personality, mental disorders, etc.) for which heritability is hotly debated.

Heredity and Environment Heritability The degree to which variation in trait stems from genetic, rather than environmental, differences among individuals Environment The degree to which variation is due to environmental rather than genetic differences

Twin Studies and Family Influence If trait is genetic: closely related more similar than less closely related Many close relatives share environments, too. Types of studies to separate effects monozygotic twins reared together monozygotic twins reared apart siblings/dizygotic reared together siblings/dizygotic reared apart adoptive siblings reared together MSClip art Discussion here about the higher correlation between identical twins’ IQ scores than fraternal twins’ and whether siblings were reared together or apart and the genetic role then in intelligence

Racial Difference in IQ Difference in average IQ among different racial groups can be measured. More variation in IQ scores within a particular group than between groups.

Within and Between Group Differences Each cornfield planted from same package of genetically diverse seeds. One field is quite fertile, the other is not. Within each field, the differences are due to genetics. Between each field, the differences are due to environment (fertility).

Other Influences on IQ Scores Cross-cultural studies show that the average IQ of groups subject to social discrimination are often lower than the socially dominant group even if there is no racial difference. Tests reflect the culture in which they are developed; cultural factors also influence test-taking behavior (culture bias).

Stereotype Threat A psychological predicament in which you fear that you will be evaluated in terms of a negative stereotype about a group to which you belong; creates anxiety and self-doubt and can lower performance in a particular domain that is important to you.

Creativity To enhance your creativity: Creativity as a goal Reinforce creative behavior Engage in problem finding Acquire relevant knowledge Try different approaches Exert effort and expect setbacks MS Clip art Gallery