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Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
KNOW SOME TERMS Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
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Cognition
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the mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge
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Thinking
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The manipulation of mental representations of information in order to draw inferences and conclusions
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Mental Image
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A mental representation of objects or events that are not physically present
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Concept
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A mental category that is formed by learning the rules or features that define it
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Natural Concept
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A mental category that is formed as a result of everyday experience
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Prototype
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The most typical instance of a particular concept
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Problem solving
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Thinking and behavior directed toward attaining a goal that is not readily available
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Trial and Error
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A problem-solving strategy that involves attempting different solutions and eliminating those that do not work
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Algorithm
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A problem- solving strategy that involves following a specific rule, procedure, or method that inevitably produces the correct solution
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Heuristic
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A problem-solving strategy that involves following a general rule of thumb to reduce the number of possible solution
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Insight
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The sudden realization of how problem can be solved
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Intuition
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Coming to a conclusion or making a judgment without conscious awareness of the thought in their usual or customary way
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Functional Fixedness
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The tendency to view objects as functioning only in their usual or customary way
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Mental set
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The tendency to persist in solving problems with solutions that have worked in the past
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Availability heuristic
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A strategy in which the likelihood of an event is estimated on the basis of how readily available other instances of the even are in memory
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Representativeness heuristic
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A strategy in which the likelihood of an event is estimated by comparing how similar it is to the prototype
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Language
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A system for combining arbitrary symbols to produce an infinite number of meaningful statements
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Linguistic relativity Hypothesis
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The notion that differences among languages cause differences in the thoughts of their speakers
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Animal Cognition
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The study of animal learning, memory, thinking, and language
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Intelligence
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The global capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with the environment.
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Mental Age
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A measurement of intelligence in which an individual’s mental age is expressed in terms of the average abilities of a given age group
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Intelligence Quotient
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An global measure of intelligence derived by comparing an individual's scores of others in the same age group
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Achievement test
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A test designed to measure a person’s level of knowledge, skill, or accomplishment in a particular areas
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Aptitude Test
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A designed to assesses a person’s capacity to benefit from education or training
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Standardization
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The administration of a test to a large, representative sample of people under uniform conditions for the purpose of establishing norms
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Normal Distribution
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A bell shaped distribution of individual differences in a normal population in which most scores cluster around the average score
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Reliability
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The ability of a test to produce consistent results when administered on repeated occasions under similar conditions
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Validity
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The ability of a test to measure what it is intended to measure
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G factor or General intelligence
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The notion of a general intelligence factor that is responsible for a person’s overall performance on tests of mental ability
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Triarchic theory of intelligence
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Sternberg’s theory that there are three distinct forms of intelligence; analytic, creative, and practical
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Heritability
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The percentage of variation within a given population that is due to heredity
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Stereotype threat
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A psychological predicament in which fear that you will be evaluated in terms of negative stereotype about a group to which you belong creates anxiety and self-doubt, lowering performance in a particular domain that is important to you
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People
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Alfred Binset
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French psychologist who, along with Simon, developed the first widely used intelligence test
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Howard Gardner
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Contemporary American psychologist whose theory of intelligence states that there is not one intelligence, but multiple independent intelligence
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Charles Spearman
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British psychologist who advanced the theory that a general intelligence factor, called the g factor, is responsible for overall intellectual functioning
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Lewis Terman
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American psychologist who translated and adapted the Binet-Simon intelligence test used in the US; he also began a major longitudinal study of the lives of gifted children in 1921
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Louis L. Thurstone
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American psychologist who advanced the theory that intelligence is composed of several primary mental abilities and cannot accurately described by an overall general or g factor measure
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David Wechsler
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American psychologist who developed the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, the most widely used intelligence test.
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