Intelligence and Tests

23
Or Are you really as smart as you think you are? And how you can find out

description

Intelligence and Tests. Or Are you really as smart as you think you are? And how you can find out. Historical Perspective. Phrenology Craniometry The Dilemma: Mustard Seed or Ball Bearings. Historical Perspective. Alfred Binet Tried to identify mentally retarded children. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Intelligence and Tests

Page 1: Intelligence and Tests

Or

Are you really as smart as you think you are? And how you can

find out

Page 2: Intelligence and Tests

Phrenology

Craniometry

The Dilemma:Mustard Seed or Ball Bearings

Page 3: Intelligence and Tests

Alfred Binet

Tried to identify mentally retarded children.

Came up with the first IQ test

Page 4: Intelligence and Tests

Mental Age Chronological Age

IQ =

A 4 year old who can answer questions that a typical 6 year old could answer would have an IQ of 150

Distinguishing Ignorance from Stupidity?

Page 5: Intelligence and Tests

Mean = 100 Standard Deviation = 15

130+ = Gifted

145+ = Genius

70- = Moron

55- = Imbecile

25- = Idiot

Page 6: Intelligence and Tests

Componential Intelligence – skills involving metacognition, knowledge acquisition

Experiential Intelligence – Being able to apply knowledge to novel situations

Contextual Intelligence – Common sense

Page 7: Intelligence and Tests

The Savant Problem

Brain Damaged Cases

Gardner’s theory of Multiple Intelligences

Page 8: Intelligence and Tests

1) Linguistic2) Mathematical 3) Spatial4) Kinesthetic5) Musical 6) Interpersonal7) Intrapersonal 8) Naturalist/Spiritual

Page 9: Intelligence and Tests

Alan Turing and his famous test

Don’t forget Demo

Page 10: Intelligence and Tests

What evidence would be necessary to persuade you that an animal was intelligent?

Continuum vs. Discrete Measures of Intelligence

Page 11: Intelligence and Tests

Face Validity – The extent to which a test appears to test-takers to be valid

Content Validity – How well a test provides a representation of the content domain

Criterion Validity – How well the test predicts

Construct Validity – Does the content domain measure what its supposed to

Page 12: Intelligence and Tests

Multiple Choice – Easy to administer, hard to find good distracter items.

Likert Scale – Item in which you rate on a scale your level of agreement: even vs. odd

Q-sorts – checklist of adjectives: susceptible to context effects

Free response – Need a coding Scheme

Page 13: Intelligence and Tests

Double Barreled Questions:

“I didn’t vote for Gore because I didn’t like his stance on affirmative action”

Page 14: Intelligence and Tests

Redundant Items Lower Content Validity by Over-sampling parts of the content domain.

Mix positive and negative questions to overcome positive response bias.

Page 15: Intelligence and Tests

Ambiguous Items lower validity:

To what extent to you agree with the following:

“An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth”

Turn the other cheek vs. I’ll hurt them twice as much as they hurt me…

Page 16: Intelligence and Tests

Ambiguous Items lower validity:

“I’m constantly searching my room for bugs”

Page 17: Intelligence and Tests

Demand Characteristics:

Thank you for your participation in this study. You have submitted photographs of yourself, and these have been reviewed by 100 raters, at least 98 of whom have classified you as "extremely unattractive." We believe that especially unattractive people such as yourself generally have low self-esteem and feel nervous about interactions with other people. Please keep this in mind as you fill out the following survey.

Page 18: Intelligence and Tests

Standardization

Expectation effects

Reinforcing Responses

Page 19: Intelligence and Tests

Restricted Range Problems

Page 20: Intelligence and Tests

Simpson’s Paradox Revisited

Page 21: Intelligence and Tests

Feedback and the Barnum Effect

Do Demo Now

Page 22: Intelligence and Tests

1) Intelligence is a tricky concept and is not as easily defined as one might think.

2) Testing is difficult, and many tests have problems that you need to be aware of.

Page 23: Intelligence and Tests

Take and evaluate online tests

2-3 pages, doubles spaced, normal font and margins

You can discuss this with your classmates, but the final analysis must be your own