Chapter 9 - Intelligence

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Metabolic disorders

Group of medical diagnoses that cause intellectual disability by affecting energy production and use in the body.

gifted

Having an IQ above 130 or special talents or aptitudes.

quantitative reasoning

Measure a person's ability to solve problems involving numbers.

familial intellectual disability

Mild intellectual disability associated with homes that are intellectually, nutritionally, and emotionally impoverished.

adaptive behaviors

The most important factor when evaluating intellectual disability.

intelligence

The overall capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and to adapt to one's surroundings.

neural intelligence

The speed and efficiency of the nervous system.

visual-spatial processing

The ability to analyze visually presented information, including relationships between objects, spatial orientation, assembling pieces to make a whole, and detecting visual patterns.

analytic intelligence

The ability to identify and define problems and to find strategies for solving them ("book learning").

emotional intelligence

The ability to perceive, use, and understand feelings in ourselves and others, as well as the ability to manage those feelings effectively.

mental age

The average cognitive ability displayed by a person.

normal distribution

The distribution (or scattering) of IQ scores approximates a bell-shaped curve.

Army Alpha Test

The first group intelligence test to be administered.

executive functions

The higher-level mental processes that allow us to regulate and coordinate our own thought processes.

practical intelligence

The intellectual skills used in everyday problem solving ("street smarts").

individual intelligence tests

Type of test given by a trained specialist such as a licensed clinical psychologist.

multiple aptitude tests

Type of test that measures two or more types of ability.

special aptitude tests

Type of test that predicts whether you will succeed in a single area, such as clerical work or computer programming.

twin studies

Used to identify the relative impact of heredity and environment on the development of intelligence.

Alfred Binet

Was the first to contribute to what is now called the modern intelligence test.

chronological age

What early intelligence tests yielded an intelligence quotient by comparing to one's mental age.

brain efficiency

What is measured by a study that investigates the relationship between speed of processing and intelligence scores.

intellectual disability disorder

According to the DSM-5, an individual with an IQ below 70.

The Differential Aptitude Test

7-12 grade specific test that measures verbal reasoning, numerical ability, abstract reasoning, perceptual speed and accuracy, mechanical reasoning, space relations, spelling, and language usage.

intellectual determination

A desire to know, to excel, and to persevere.

Hydrocephaly

A disorder caused by a buildup of cerebrospinal fluid within brain cavities.

Microcephaly

A disorder caused by the development of the brain in a limited spaced due to the extremely small size of the skull.

Down syndrome

A genetic disorder caused by an extra 21st chromosome that causes moderate to severe intellectual disability and a shortened life expectancy.

Phenylketonuria

A genetic disorder in which the essential digestive enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase is missing.

Fragile X syndrome

A genetic disorder involving an abnormality in the X chromosome, which becomes constricted and often breaks.

savant syndrome

A limited general intelligence accompanied by exceptional mental ability in one or more narrow areas, such as mental arithmetic, calendar calculation, art, or music.

Flynn effect

A rapid rise in IQ scores in Western, industrialized nations over the last 50 or so years.

Cretinism

A type of intellectual disability that appears in infancy and is caused by an insufficient supply of thyroid hormone.

validity

Ability of a test to measure what it is intended to measure.

reliability

Ability of a test to yield very similar scores for the same individual over repeated testings.

reflective intelligence

Ability to become aware of one's own thinking habits.

g-factor

According to a popular theory, the core of intelligence is an overall mental ability.

deviation IQ

An IQ derived statistically from a person's relative standing in his or her age category.

norm

An average score made by a large group of people like those for whom the test was designed.

Head Start

An example of an early childhood education program in the United States.

average intelligence

Any IQ score from 90 to 109.

psychometric test

Any measurement of a person's mental functions.

aptitude

Capacity for learning certain abilities.

expert systems

Computers that are able to follow clearly stated rules about complex skills.

machine learning

Field of artificial intelligence that attempts to overcome the limitation that most computers cannot learn on their own.

multiple intelligences

Howard Gardner's theory that there are many specialized categories of intellectual ability.

reaction time

Indicates a person's speed of processing, which is related to intelligence.

verbal intelligence

Intelligence assessed by answering questions involving vocabulary, general information, arithmetic, and other language- or symbol-oriented tasks.

performance intelligence

Intelligence assessed by solving puzzles, assembling objects, completing pictures, and other nonverbal tasks.

The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale

Most widely used intelligence test; contains verbal and performance subtests.

fluid intelligence

Solving new problems that involve perceptual speed or quick insight involves specific mental abilities..

crystallized intelligence

Solving problems using knowledge that one has already gained involves specific mental abilities..

experiential intelligence

Specialized knowledge and skills acquired over time.

experiential intelligence

Specialized knowledge and skills acquired through learning and experience.

Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition

Widely used intelligence test primarily made up of age-ranked questions and is appropriate for people aged 2 to 85+ years.


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