Ch Intelligence
What is intelligence? Varies by culture Western cultures focus on cognitive tasks
Is “IQ” nature or nurture? IQ and genetic effects
Is “IQ” nature or nurture? IQ and birth parents
One general ability or several specific abilities? Factor analysis Used to determine if intelligence is one or a cluster of traits Clusters: verbal, mathematical, spatial, reasoning abilities General intelligence “G” factor A general capacity that underlies all specific mental abilities
Savant Syndrome Incredible ability in one area Numbers, drawing, music, memory
Emotional intelligence Ability to express, understand, and process emotions Being very empathic
Beginnings of intelligence testing Originally designed to measure cognitive aptitude Alfred Benet Predicted school achievement with mental age Eg. A 9 year old child has a mental age of 9 Lewis Terman (From Stanford University) Created the American revision of Binet’s original intelligence test Developed the “Stanford-Binet” IQ test
Intelligence Quotent (IQ) Mental age divided by chronological age X 100 E.g. 15 divided by 15 X 100 = divided by 8 X 100 = 125 Worked well for children but not adults Today’s IQ tests compare the person’s performance to others of his own age (100 is average)
Measuring intelligence Aptitude tests - Predicting ability A test of your capacity to learn College entrance exams ( SAT & GRE exams) Achievement tests - Measure what has been learned Calculus test Specific intelligence tests WAIS Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale WISC Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
Creating tests Standardization Validity Reliability
Standardization Scores relative to a pretested group Based on a normal curve The Bell shaped curve Ave. a score of intelligence test = 100
Validity Measuring what it is supposed to measure Content validity College exams Driver’s license exam Criterion validity Test compared to criterion group (e.g. depressed patients) Predictive Validity SAT & GRE exams
Reliability Consistent results Internal consistency Odd v.s. even questions