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Notes de cours

All Lectures and Readings required for PS201 Individual Differences Intelligence Section

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All Lectures and Readings required for PS201 Individual Differences Intelligence Section. I achieved a first for this module.

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Publié le
30 août 2021
Nombre de pages
23
Écrit en
2020/2021
Type
Notes de cours
Professeur(s)
Gemma gray
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INTELLIGENCE
Plato and Aristotle – gain information through senses (passive intellect) and make sense of it to use it
(active intellect). This was round 350BC.
Galton (1869) – was the first to study individual differences in intelligence
 People who are more intelligent have more fine discrimination ability
 Used reaction times and discrimination times to measure intelligence
 Thought poor eyesight and hearing meant no/low intelligence
Alfred Binet, 1904
 Made the Binet-Simon Test
o 30 tasks to evaluate children age 3-10
o Different tasks aimed at different children of different ages
o Indicates mental age of child (by types of test they could complete)
o Suggests children that may be “behind”


William Stern, 1912
 Originate the term IQ
 Had been using the Binet-Simon scale
 Noted the ratio between actual age and mental age stays the same throughout life
 Can be tracked and compared across time and people
mentalage
x 100=IQ
chronological age
Ratio IQ = very useful for when you’re working with kids -> predictable trajectory.
 This doesn’t work with adults as there is less to distinguish between each persons age
 E.g. 44 vs 45 year old
Lewis Terman, 1916
 An American psychologist
 Using the Binet-Simon Test
 Determined it wasn’t appropriate for ages
 Adapted it to come up with the Stanford-Binet test
o Simple
o Age appropriate tasks
o Matched to children age 4-14
o 40 new items on the test
 Advanced standardised testing
o Terman tested a big sample of 1000 children at the beginning of the standardised testing
and more representative
 Adopted Stern’s procedure of calculating IQ and applied it to the Stanford-Binet scale
o Then used as a benchmark for all new tests
o Reliability
Robert Yerkes, 1917
 During WW1 American army wanted a test to classify soldiers and help with the war effort
 Wanted to assign soldiers to suitable tasks and therefore assess large groups of easily
o Army Alpha test – literacy skills
o Army Beta test – patterns and geometric (without literacy skills)
 Tested 1.75 million people
 Advances
o Time limited testing (in groups)

, o Raised the profile of IQ testing in the public and business
Implicit Theories of Intelligence (non-expert)
Sternberg et al., (1981)
 Ask lay people about intelligence
 Said intelligent people are good at
o Practical problem solving
o Verbal ability
o Social competence
Sternberg (1985) different studies produce different dimensions, add:
 Intellectual balance and integration (seeing similarities, making connections)
 Goal orientation and attainment
 Contextual intelligence (learns from experience, understands environment)
 Fluid thought (thinks quickly)
Conceptions of intelligence change depending on where you live in the world:
 Western – speed of mental processing associated with high intelligence
 Eastern – awareness of self in society, history and spirituality is associated with high intelligence
Yang and Sternberg (1997)
 Asked Taiwanese and Chinese people to define intelligence
o General cognitive factor of intelligence
o Interpersonal intelligence
o Intrapersonal intelligence
o Intellectual self assertion and self effacement
Yussen and Kane (1985)
 Looked at age group differences in intelligence (11-16 year olds)
 Across all age groups, knowledge is central and a one dimensional construct
 Older children are more complex
o Nature and nurture play a role
o Differences in types of intelligence (academic, social and physical)
Siegler and Richards (1982)
 Ideal intelligent person holds different qualities at different ages
o Fry (1984) teachers definition of “intelligent” people varies per age group
 5-11 years old – popularity, friendliness, respect for rules, invest in environment
 11-18 years old – energy, verbal fluency
 18+ years – logical thinking, broad knowledge, ability to reason and manage situations
Verbal comprehension – reading, comprehension, and verbal analogies
Word fluency – generate and use words and letters
Cattell (1966)
 “g” is intelligence – comprises 2 related but distinct components
o Crystallised intelligence (Gc) – acquired knowledge and skills, vocab, comprehension,
factual knowledge etc.
o Fluid intelligence (Gf) – reasoning, problem solving, patterns, analogies, understanding
new information
 There is a dynamic relationship between Gf and Gc (see handwritten notes week 7)
Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) theory
 Influential theory of intelligence, especially for development of IQ tests
 Concluded there were 9 broad abilities and no single “g”
o Cattell-Horn Gf-Gc theory (1985)
 Quantitative knowledge (Gq)

,  Short term apprehension and retrieval (SAR)
 Tertiary storage and retrieval (TSR)
 Visual processing (Gv)
 Auditory processing (Ga)
 Processing Speed (Gs)
 Correct decision speed (CDS)
o Caroll; Three Stratum Model (1993)
 Hierarchical model based on factor analysis of 461 datasets obtained between
1927-87
 Established a 3 level hierarchy
 Stratum I – 69 different cognitive abilities
 Stratum II – 8 broad factors arising from these abilities
 Stratum III – general intelligence (g)
 In 1999 Woodcock suggested to unify the theories, so CHC developed
o Cattell – crystallised and fluid intelligence
o Cattel-Horn – 9 broad “g’s”
o Carroll – 3 stratum hierarchical model
 Combine the 3 to get CHC theory
o A 2 stratum theory (“g” factor abandoned)
o 16 broad stratum intelligences (sometimes 10)
o Lots of narrow stratum
Multiple Intelligences, Gardner, 1983, 1998
 Gardner was an educational psychologist, educational theory and practice
 Traditional testing does not translate easily into the classroom
 Western education focus on logical mathematical and linguistic intelligence
 Gardner (1983) identified 7 intelligences
o Conventional
 Linguistic
 Logical-mathematical
 Spatial
o Other
 Musical
 Bodily kinaesthetic
 Interpersonal
 Intrapersonal
 Added an extra 2
o Naturalist (interact with nature)
o Existentialist (understand surroundings and their place)
Emotional Intelligence
 Ability to understand our own and others emotions
 Use it to guide thinking and behaviour
4 Branch Model of Emotional Intelligence (Salovey and Mayer, 1990)
 Perceiving (recognising emotions) – most simple
 Facilitating (using emotions to make judgements and priorities)
 Understanding (emotions and how they are linked)
 Managing (detached evaluation, emotion regulation) – most complex
Goleman’s Theory of Emotional Intelligence
 Emotional intelligence is about learning to control our basic emotional responses e.g. fight or flight
 “mixed” model of emotional intelligence
o Emotional intelligence (awareness)
o Personality and behaviour (conscientiousness, adaptability, trustworthiness)
Goleman (2001/2002) – 4 emotional competencies
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What I used to get A*s and a first class degree from the University of Warwick

Hi Everyone, I am currently studying psychology at the University of Warwick and am predicted a 1st. I now have a marketing job at Gymshark lined up for when I graduate. At A level I achieved Psychology (A*), Geography (A), Maths (A), and EPQ (A). At GCSE I achieved 3x grade 9 (Maths, English Language, English Literature), 6x A* (Biology, Chemistry, Physics, RS, RE, Latin) and 2x A (DT and Geography). Here are all of the notes I used to get where I am now :) I also tutor, please do not hesitate to get in contact with me if you have any questions

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