Invitation to Psychology

(Barry) #1

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Chapter 7


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hinking and Intelligence


Chapter 7 Thinking and Intelligence 267

Intelligence


Measuring Memory


Animal Intelligence


Cognitive ethologists study animal
intelligence, cognition, and behavior in
natural environments.


  • Some animals can use rudimentary
    tools.

  • In the laboratory, chimpanzees have
    learned to use numerals and symbols.

  • Whether or not animals possess a
    theory of mind is the subject of
    much debate. Some theorists argue
    that the great apes, and even some
    other animals, have some understand-
    ing of their own minds and those of
    others.


In thinking about animal
cognition, we must avoid
both anthropomorphism

Stress and the Body

the failure to recognize
our commonalities with
other animals.

Dissecting Intelligence


The psychometric approach
to intelligence focuses on
performance on standardized
aptitude tests.


  • The use of factor analysis
    can help identify clusters of
    correlated items on a test
    that measure some common
    ability, such as a g factor in
    intelligence.

  • Alfred Binet came up with
    the idea of measuring a
    person’s mental age, or
    level of intellectual develop-
    ment relative to that of
    others.

  • The intelligence quotient
    (IQ) represents a person’s
    score on a particular test,
    compared to others’ scores.

  • Efforts to create intelligence
    tests unaffected by culture
    have been disappointing.

  • Stereotype threat can affect
    the test performance of
    women, old people, and
    minority groups.


Cognitive approaches to
intelligence emphasize
problem-solving strategies
and several kinds of
intelligence, rather than a
g factor.


  • Working memory and
    metacognition are impor-
    tant cognitive ingredients
    of intelligence.

  • The triarchic theory of
    intelligence proposes three
    aspects of intelligence:
    componential/analytic,
    experiential/creative, and
    contextual/practical
    (which allows acquisition of
    tacit knowledge).

  • Emotional intelligence
    is an important type of
    nonintellectual intelligence.


Intelligence is an inferred characteristic, usually defined as the ability to profit from
experience, acquire knowledge, think abstractly, act purposefully, or adapt to change.

The Origins of


Intelligence


Behavioral-genetic
studies show the
heritability of
intelligence (as
measured by IQ
tests) to be high.

The Question of Group


Differences



  • Genetic explanations of
    black–white differences in IQ
    have inappropriately used
    heritability estimates based
    mainly on white samples.

  • Environmental influences on
    intelligence include:

  • poor prenatal care.

  • malnutrition.

  • exposure to toxins.

  • stressful family circum-
    stances.

  • living in an impoverished,
    disadvantaged neighborhood.


Motivation, Hard Work,


and Intellectual Success



  • Intellectual performance is
    strongly influenced by
    motivation and self-discipline.

  • These in turn are affected by
    cultural expectations,
    attitudes toward education,
    and beliefs about the origins
    of mental abilities.


Animal Minds


Animals and Language


In several studies,
primates and other
animals, such as
border collies and
African grey parrots,
have acquired some
aspects of human
language.
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