Psychology2016

(Kiana) #1

296 CHAPTER 7


between race and IQ, not race and intelligence. Second, they assumed that intelligence itself
is very heavily influenced by genetics, with a heritability factor of about .80. The current
estimate of the heritability of intelligence is about .50 ( Plomin & DeFries, 1998; Plomin &
Spinath, 2004).
Herrnstein and Murray also failed to understand that heritability only applies
to differences that can be found within a group of people as opposed to those between
groups of people or individuals (Gould, 1981). Heritability estimates can only be made
truly from a group that was exposed to a similar environment.
One of their findings was that Japanese Americans are at the top of the IQ
ladder, a finding that they attribute to racial and genetic characteristics. They seem
to ignore the cultural influence of intense focus on education and achievement by
Japanese-American parents (Neisser et al., 1996). Scientists (Beardsley, 1995; Kamin,
1995) have concluded that, despite the claims of The Bell Curve, there is no real sci-
entific evidence for genetic differences in intelligence between different racial groups.
A series of studies, using blood-group testing for racial grouping (different racial
groups have different rates of certain blood groups, allowing a statistical estimation
of ancestry), found no significant relationship between ethnicity and IQ (Neisser
et al., 1996).

Although The Bell Curve stated that Japanese
Americans are genetically superior in
intelligence, the book’s authors overlook the
influence of cultural values. Many Japanese
American parents put much time and effort
into helping their children with schoolwork.

Concept Map L.O. 7.6, 7.7, 7.8, 7.9, 7.10


Interactive

Intelligence
(the ability to learn from one’s experiences, acquire knowledge, and use resources effectively)

uses a variety of verbal and performance subtests to
provide an overall score of intelligence and index scores
related to specific cognitive domains

key element to be tested was child’s mental age

now uses
age-group
comparison
norms as the
Wechsler does

Spearman’s g factor: intelligence comprises two different abilities

Gardner’s multiple intelligences: overall intelligence comprises nine different types

Sternberg’s triarchic theory: intelligence comprises three different aspects

theories

g factor: general intelligence
s factor: specific intelligence

Terman (researcher at Stanford) translated and revised Binet’s test
first test to adopt intelligence quotient (IQ):
IQ 5 mental age/chronological age 3 100
uses a variety of verbal and nonverbal
subtests to provide an overall estimate
of intelligence and scores related
to five areas of cognition

good tests are both valid and reliable
standardized administration, scoring, and comparison against norms
intelligence is assumed to follow a normal curve

is challenging

Measuring


first formal test
created by
Alfred Binet and
Theodore Simon
to help identify
French students
who needed more
help with learning

test construction

Binet’s Mental Ability Test

Stanford-Binet

Wechsler Tests

analytical
creative
practical

tests

different definitions of intelligence and multiple ways to assess them
difficult to design tests that are completely free of cultural bias

nature and nurture

individual differences
IQ tests can be used
to identify individuals
who differ significantly
from those of
average intelligence

giftedness

other factors

intellectual
disability/
intellectual
developmental
disorder

emotional
intelligence

criteria

classifications

causal factors

awareness of and ability to manage one’s own emotions,
self-motivation, empathy, and social skills
may be related to traditional intelligence but data is still
being collected

typically grow up to be well-adjusted adults EXCEPT
when “pushed” to achieve at younger and younger ages
extreme geniuses may experience social
and behavioral adjustment issues as children

environmental

biological

toxins such as lead or mercury
poverty

IQ. 130 (2 SD above mean)
IQ. 140 are called geniuses

criteria

characteristics

current heritability
estimate is about .50

correlation is not 1.00, so environment also
has to play a part

IQ , 70 (2 SD below mean)
adaptive skills significantly below age-appropriate level
onset of deficits must occur during childhood or adolescence

Down syndrome
fetal alcohol syndrome
fragile X syndrome

identical twins
reared together
show a correlation
of .86 between
their IQs

heritability estimates apply within groups
of people, not between groups, not to
individuals, and only in a general sense

range from mild to profound, depending on severity
of deficts or level of support required

M07_CICC7961_05_SE_C07.indd 296 9/2/16 7:15 PM

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