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Chapter 11: Intelligence and Psychological Testing.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 11: Intelligence and Psychological Testing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 11: Intelligence and Psychological Testing

2 A Psychologist Can Release Your Test Results when 1. A court orders it 2. With your written permission (18 or over)

3 Principle Types of Psychological Tests Aptitude=a potential ability to perform a task that is not yet learned (say to play piano) Type of tests: –Intelligence – general mental ability/intellectual potential –Aptitude – specific types of mental abilities/a potential ability (ex. Verbal/abstract/mechanical reasoning, ASVAB) –Achievement Tests (mastery of a subject, ex. SAT/ACT, FSA, EOCs, AP Exams) –Personality tests (2 types): 1.questionaire/self reporting inventory=most common (ex. MMPI-identifies disorders) and 2. projective=sentence, story, or picture completion; picture interpretation (ex. Rorschach and TAT)

4 Key Concepts in Psychological Testing Standardized Test=piloted on a population similar to those that are meant to take the test and whose achievement norms are established Standardization=uniform procedures used in test administration (ex., instructions) and scoring-without this, test is useless - Scoring criteria –Test norms=information on where a score on a test ranks –Standardization group=the sample of people on which the norms are based –Percentile score=% of people who score at or below the score -82nd percentile means scoring higher than or the same as 82 % of those taking test

5 1.allows comparing scores 2.reduce extraneous variables on scores 3.increase reliability and validity of the test scores 4.objectivity of the scoring procedures used NOT TO SAVE TIME Why Standardization

6 Key Concepts in Psychological Testing Reliability=consistency of score if test repeated 1. Test-Retest Reliability=do scores correlate when the person takes it more then once? –Correlation coefficient=number index of the degree of relationship between two variables-over.70 and above is good 2. split half-reliability=break test in half and correlate one’s performance on the two halves 3. equivalent form reliability=reliability on different forms of the same test (version A or B)

7 Key Concepts in Psychological Testing Validity=does the test measure what is was intended to? 1.Content validity/face-validity (it represents the information it is to cover-AP exam covers psych not all statistics) 2. Predictive validity (does it predict what it is suppose to-SAT/success in college-compare it with the criterion of college success) 3. Construct validity=does it accurately measure a hypothetical or abstract concept(ex. Extraversion or personality, or does it just measure one’s mood)

8 Figure 9.3 Correlation and reliability

9 Positive correlation example The higher a students SAT scores, the higher her college GPA

10 The BIG controversial, debate question: Is there construct validity for Intelligence Tests?

11 Key Figures Key Figures/contributors in intelligence research and testing : Frances Galton-Heredity Genius Charles Spearman-two Factor theory (g and s) Alfred Binet-identify slower children and MA LouisTerman-Stanford Binet Test; IQ=MA/CA X 100 David Wechsler –WAIS and WISC Howard Gardner-8 Multiple Intelligences Robert Sternberg-Three Intelligences Raymond Cattell- Crystallized verses Fluid Goleman’s- EQ (emotional intelligence)

12 The Evolution of Intelligence Testing *Sir Francis Galton (1869) –*Hereditary Genius-concluded that success runs in families because intelligence is passed from generation to generation, ( people he looked at had superior upbringing) –*Coined the phrase nature v. nurture –Measured sensory processes that he saw as innate potential –*Invented concepts of correlation and percentile test scores

13 Intelligence-Innate verses Environmental Using birth families and adoptive families: 1. Give an example of what would indicate innate dominates 2. Give an example of what would prove environmental dominates

14 Spearman’s Two-Factor Theory (1904) first to take a psychometric (test measurement) approach by measuring cognitive factors that could measure intelligence Intelligence has two factors: g=general mental ability (based on what cognitive tasks have in common); s=specific mental abilities (math, mechanical, verbal) g is what modern psychologists have changed it into what is now viewed as an objective IQ score

15 The Evolution of Intelligence Testing Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon (1905) -asked to devise test to identify slower children who needed special training –Binet-Simon Intelligence Scale (abstract reasoning skills) –Mental age-ability typical of a child that age (would not work for adults)

16 The Evolution of Intelligence Testing Lewis Terman worked at Stanford U (1916)-revised Binet’s test –Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale –Intelligence Quotient (IQ) = MA/CA x 100 –Could compare children of different ages David Wechsler (1955)-adult test: –Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) –Had a verbal and a performance test –Eventually came up with a test for children, 6-16 (WISC) –WPPSI-Wechsler preschool and primary scale of intelligence-as young as 4

17 The Normal Distribution Bell curve- the center is the mean..every live in either direction is one standard deviations from the norm/mean, or 15 points. (Page 537 in the textbook) In normal distribution, 68% of the distribution falls above and below the mean Normal IQ Range=85 to115,Average IQ is 100 Below 70=Intellectual Disability-2 standard deviations below mean; before age 18 Gifted 130 and above -2 standard deviations above the mean

18 Describing Data Measures of Variability-how scores vary from the center Normal Curve (bell shaped)

19 Figure 9.7 The normal distribution

20 Reliability and Validity of IQ tests *Exceptionally reliable – correlations into the.90s

21 Extremes of Intelligence: Mental Retardation (aka-Intellectual Disability) 4 levels: mild (51 to 70), moderate (36-50), severe (20-35), profound (below 20) –Mild most common Causes: –Environmental vs. biological (25% have organic/biological cause)

22 Extremes of Intelligence: Giftedness –IQ 2 SD above mean standard (130) Side note- IQ score in adolescence best predicts: Grades in School Not: job satisfaction or profession, personal adjustment, or interpersonal skills

23 Intelligence: Heredity or Environment? Heredity –twin studies (reared together): identical twins=.86 correlation reared apart.72 Fraternal twins=.60 –Heritability estimates (genetic inheritance) Environment –Adoption studies –Cumulative deprivation hypothesis- environmental deprivation led to erosion in IQ score –Environmental improvement led to increased scores

24 Intelligence: Heredity or Environment? –The Flynn effect=IQ scores have increased through century due to nutrition, education, technology Interaction –The concept of the* reaction range : 20 to 25 points= genetics places an upper limit on IQ. -So, enriched environments place children at the higher range May also explain why children from poor environments have high IQs

25 Figure 9.16 Reaction range

26 Stereotype Threat Anxiety influences achievement of members of a group concerned that that their performance on a test will confirm a negative stereotype- THEY have to have knowledge of the stereotype; may account for lower IQ scores for certain groups

27 New Directions in the Study of Intelligence Cognitive Conceptualizations of Intelligence –Sternberg’s “successful intelligence” known as: Triarchic Theory 1.Analytical -reasoning/problem solving- needed for school work and assessed on IQ tests 2. Creative (original and useful information) 3. Practical (“street smarts”) Side note: creativity=original and divergent

28 New Directions in the Study of Intelligence Expanding the Concept of Intelligence Gardner’s multiple intelligences –Verbal –Musical –Logical-mathematical –Spatial (architect or artist), –Kinesthetic (athlete, dancer) –Intrapersonal (figuring out their own feelings, motivations and goals) –Interpersonal (understand and interact effectively with others-includes verbal and non-verbal communication skills(

29 New Directions in the Study of Intelligence –Goleman’s Emotional intelligence (EQ): –Regulate (control) own emotions –Able to perceive and understand others emotions –Effectively express emotions –Understand own emotions

30 Other Intelligence Information Raymond Cattell –Two types mental abilities: Crystallized intelligence =knowledge and skills accumulated over a life time, tends to increase with age Fluid intelligence =ability to reason and make sense of abstract information. (ex. spatial /visual skills, rote memory, new puzzles) may decrease at about age 60


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