Psychology in Your Life Ch 8 Thinking and Intelligence
Infants that were breast fed for 6 months were how many points higher on IQ test
5 - 7 points
Children's Intelligence Quotient
A childs IQ is computed by dividing the child's mental age by the chronological age and multiplying the result by 100
Concept
A mental representation of objects, events or relationships around common themes. Giutar - 6 strings, Trumpet - Brass tubing and played by blowing It can include knowledge about a relationship between items. Violins are smaller than guitars.
Heuristics
A rule of thumb as an informal way of making a decision. They require minimal cognitive resources. Unconscious. Result in bias - high price equals high quality
Category
A schema to group things based on shared properties. Country music instruments, Orchestral Music instruments
Mental maps
A visual image that includes analogical and symbolic representations. A picture of Africa. Not always accurate
5 facets of intelligence
Ability to understand complex ideas Able to adapt effectively to the environment Can learn from experience Able to engage in various forms of reasoning Able to overcome obsticles in life
Symbolic Representations
Abstract - words or ideas. Abstract mental representations that consist of words or ideas. Hamburger
Three types of psychometric tests that measure slightly different but overlapping aspects of intelligence
Achievement tests - ACT, Aptitude tests - SAT, Intelligence tests - Stanford Binet test, WAIS
What forms the basis of human thought, intelligence and the ability to solve complex problems
Analogical and Symbolic representations
Mental Age
Binet measured a child's test scores with an individuals level of developement relative to other in that society
Subgoal
Breaking ultimate goal into smaller, achievable tasks
Prototype Model
Concepts are organized based on the most typical member of a category. Certain characteristics. They are more representative of that category that are other concepts in the category
Mental Sets
Established ways of thinking that can save us time and effort of searching for new types of solutions
Stereotypes
Generalizations about events, objects and people. They influence how people think about and behave towards others.
Analogical Representations
Images. Mental representations that have some of the physical characteristics of objects
Fluid Intelligence
Involves information processing, especially in novel or complex areas - reasoning, drawing, analogies
Crystalized Intelligence
Involves learned knowledge we acquire through experiences - vocabulary, spelling
Gardener's Theory of Multiple Intelligences contribute to Psychologies understanding of intelligence
It recognizes that people can be average in some intelligences and outstanding in others.
What are some environmental factors that contributes to differences in intelligence in a variety of racial or ethnic groups
Life circumstances, targets of discrimination and pessimism are some environmental factors that contribute to difference in intelligence
Functional Fixedness
Mental representations about the typical functions of particular objects. tack box and candle
Framing
Presenting the same information in a different way to make it more appealing. 75 meat or 25 fat
Two features in all psychometric intelligence tests
Reliability and Validity
Analogy
Relying on knowledge of similar problem to solve current problems. Surgeon and the fortress
Restructuring
Representing the problem in a novel way. The new mental view reveals a solution. Dot puzzle
Relationship between schemas and representations
Schemas are useful because of consistent attributes, people have specific roles within the context of the situation, we can think effectively about object by categorizing them
Satisficing
Seek to find good enough choice that meets minimum requirements
Lewis Terman
Stanford Binet Test. Most widely used test for children
Spencer and Walton researched stereotyped threats. What were their conclusions?
Stereotyped groups performed worse than non-steroeotyped groups. Interventions to reduce stereotyped threats are often successful
Four ways of solving problems
Subgoals, Working backwards, Analogy, Sudden Insight
Availability Heuristic
Tendency to make a decision based on information that comes most easily to mind. farmers - librarians
Representativeness heuristic
Tendency to place people of objects in a category if they are similar to the concept that is the prototype. Helena is a cognitive psychologist because her characteristics better match the prototype of a psychologist
Base Rate
The frequency of an event occurring. There are more postal workers than psychologists. Therefore the base rate for postal workers is higher than psychologists. Therefore, an person is more likely to be a postal worker.
Behavioral Genetics
The study of the basis of behaviors and traits such as intelligence. Twins raised apart are similar in intelliogence
How many genes contribute to intelligence
Thousands and each one of them has only a small effect
Reasoning
To determine if a conclusion is valid. You use information to determine this
What two parts make up the WAIS
Verbal measures comprehension and performance measures nonverbal tasks - arranging pictures in order
Working backwards
When the appropriate steps for solving a problem are not clear, proceeding from the goal state to initial state can be helpful
Who refined Binets scoring system
Wilhelm Stern refined Binet's system by developing the intelligence quotient.
Decision making
You identify important criteria and determine how well each alternative satisfies the criteria
Problem Solving
You overcome obstacles to move from your present state to your desired goal
Sudden Insight
You suddenly realize that there is a solution to your problem
Intelligence
a specific instance of adaptive behavior, of coping with the environment and organizing through thought and action
Stereo type threat
apprehension that people exhibit if they believe that their performance on tests might confirm negative beliefs about their racial group
Cultural Bias
if your culture does not know what a reed is used for then you might do poorly on a test. Does not mean you are not smart
WAIS Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
is used to measure intelligence of adults
Two approaches to decision making
maximizing and satisficing.
Savants
minimal intellectual capabilities inmost domains but exceptional capabilities in some intelligent processes
Wilhelm Stern
modified the Binet Simon test and it is now called the Stanford Binet test. Intelligence Quotient.
Intelligence Quotient
numerical value given to intelligence based on score of 100 for average intelligence
99.9 percent of genes are the same amount in all humans
one race is not smarter then another
Examples of environmental influences that can lead to lower intelligence
poor nutrition prenatal factors - drugs, alcohol, stress postnatal factors - family, social class, education, cutlural beleifs Sitmulation
Achievement
test that assess current skills and knowledge. ACT
Aptitude test
test that measures your ability to learn in the future. SAT
Miller Analogy Test
test used for admissions to graduate school as well as hiring decisions in the work place. Predicted academic performance, productivity, creativity and job performance
Exemplar Model
the flexibility concern in the prototype model by suggesting that a category has no single concept as its best representation. Instead, people form a fuzzy representation based on their experiences.
Thinking
the mental manipulation of sensory input is changed into signals that the brain can process
Maximizing
trying to make the perfect choice among options
Formal Reasoning
using the standardized and objective procedures of the scientific methods to collect empirical evidence and test hypothesis to see if they are valid
General intelligence tests are closely related to
working memory