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History: defining & measuring intelligence
Sir Francis Galton ( ) genes & family lines intelligence = biological capacity reaction times & sensory acuity later research contradicted these measures Photo of Francis Galton scanned in from Gray's text, pg. 356; I like to discuss the eugenics controversy with my class when discussing Galton as well as his love of measurement & the bell curve
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History: defining & measuring intelligence
Alfred Binet ( ) Binet-Simon Test France, 1905 intelligence = collection of higher-order mental abilities loosely related to one another intelligence is nurtured mental age Photo scanned in from Gray's text, pg. 357
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History: defining & measuring intelligence
Charles Spearman ( ) liked Binet’s methods of testing liked Galton’s idea that intelligence was a single entity developed “factor analysis” two factors “g” = general intelligence “s” = specific ability score on any given test depends on a combination of these 2 factors g accounts for the similarity in test results s accounts for the differences in test results
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History: defining & measuring intelligence
Raymond Cattell ( ) student of Spearman’s modified Spearman’s intelligence theory thought that general intelligence was not one factor but two
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Cattell’s Fluid & Crystallized Intelligence
Fluid intelligence ability to perceive relationships without previous specific experience matrices tests or verbal analogies sample raven matrix problem scanned from Gray's text, pg. 360. there are sample verbal analogies in Gray, pg. 360 that an instructor could use here there are also other matrix tests that an instructor could include if desired
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Cattell’s Fluid & Crystallized Intelligence
mental ability derived from previous experience word meanings use of tools cultural practices
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Modern intelligence tests
The Stanford-Binet Scale modification of the original Binet-Simon, after original came to US intelligence quotient (IQ) = child’s mental age divided by child’s chronological age used widely in the US, not as much as previously
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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
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Standardized scoring of Wechsler tests
All raw scores converted to standardized scores Normal distribution Mean of 100 Standard deviation of 15 2.14% 13.59% 34.13% 0.13% 95.44% 68.26% Wechsler IQ score Number of score figure taken from CD-ROM, Gray text, pg. 363, figure 10.5
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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 stuff that you learn in school Prestigious positions On-the-job performance & other work-related variables
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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.
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What do IQ tests measure about your mind?
Mental self-government Sternberg studies more complex decision-making abilities states that the mind is made up of different components, each of which works on different problem solving tasks
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Summary History of intelligence testing Modern intelligence testing
how did each figure define & measure intelligence? Modern intelligence testing Stanford-Binet vs. Wechsler tests standardized scoring -- what is “average?”
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Summary Validity of IQ tests What do IQ tests measure?
are they really measuring intelligence? What do IQ tests measure? mental quickness mental self-government
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