thinking, language and intelligence

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Thinking, Language and Intelligence

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Thinking, Language and Intelligence. Cognition. Mental Activities Acquiring, retaining and using knowledge THINKING!. Language. System for combining symbols to produce infinite number of meaningful statements. Intelligence. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Thinking, Language and Intelligence

Page 2: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Cognition

• Mental Activities

• Acquiring, retaining and using knowledge

• THINKING!

Page 3: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Language

• System for combining symbols to produce infinite number of meaningful statements

Page 4: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Intelligence

Global capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with

the environment

Page 5: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Measuring Intelligence

• Alfred Binet

• Mental age• Chronological age

• IQ—comparison of people in similar age groups

Page 6: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Alfred Binet (1857–1911)– Intelligence—collection of 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

Page 7: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Modern Intelligence Tests

The Stanford-Binet Scale– modification of the original Binet-Simon,

by Lewis Terman at Stanford university

– intelligence quotient (IQ)—child’s mental age divided by child’s chronological age

Page 8: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Group Intelligence Testing

• Began during WWI when the army had to screen millions of army recruits

• Army Alpha--given to people who could read

• Army Beta--given to people who could not read

• Adapted for civilian use, but widely misused

Page 9: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

1921 Terman Study

• 1500 California children with IQs above 100 studied in longitudinal study

• How would this genius level IQ affect the course of their lives?

• Results- socially well adjusted, taller, stronger, fewer illnesses and accidents

• As adults- higher incomes, 2/3 college grads many became successful professionals

Page 10: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Wechsler Intelligence Tests WAIS

• Designed for Adults

• Used more widely now than Stanford-Binet

• Modeled after Binet’s, adult test called WAIS

• Consisted of several subtests

• Reflected belief that intelligence involves different strengths and weaknesses

Page 11: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

WAIS Scales

• Test measured several abilities

• Performance scales--nonverbal abilities

• Verbal scales--vocabulary, comprehension, and other verbal tasks

• Sub-scales gave the WAIS practical and clinical value

Page 12: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Types of Tests

• Achievement test—designed to measure level of knowledge, skill, or accomplishment in a particular area

• Aptitude test—designed to measure capability to benefit from education or training

• Interest test—measures self-reported vocational interests and skills

Page 13: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

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

Page 14: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Standardized Scoring of Wechsler Tests

• All raw scores converted to standardized scores

• Normal distribution

• Mean of 100

• Standard deviation of 15

50 70 85 100 115 130 145

2.14%13.59%34.13%34.13%13.59%2.14%

0.13% 0.13%95.44%

68.26%

Wechsler IQ score

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Page 15: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

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

• On-the-job performance & other work-related variables

Page 16: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

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

Page 17: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Theories of Intelligence

• Charles Spearman—“g” factor

• Louis Thurstone—intelligence as a person’s “pattern” of mental abilities

• Howard Gardner—multiple intelligences

• Sternberg–triarchic theory

Page 18: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences

Page 19: 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 due more to genes

or to environment?”– both genes & intelligence crucial for any trait

Page 20: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Heredity and Environment

• Heritability– degree to which variation in trait stems from

genetic, rather than environmental, differences among individuals

• Environment– degree to which variation is due to environmental

rather than genetic differences

Page 21: Thinking, Language  and Intelligence

Twin Studies & Family Influence

• If trait 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