SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Intelligence
•Information

Defined : Galton, Binet, Piaget, Wechsler

•Factor-Analytic
•Information

Theories: Spearman, Gardner, Cattell-Horn-Carrol

Processing View
What is Intelligence ?


Intelligence includes :

1.

Acquire and apply knowledge

2.

Reason logically

3.

Plan effectively

4.

Infer perceptively

5.

Make sound judgements and solve problems

6.

Grasp and visualize concepts

7.

Pay attention

8.

Be intuitive

9.

Find the right words and thoughts with facility

10.

Cope with, adjust to, and make the most of new situations
Intelligence defined: views of the Lay Public


Research by Sternberg and his associates on how laypeople and psychologists
defined intelligence



Study of 476 people (randomly selected) asked to list behaviours related to –
intelligence, academic intelligence, everyday intelligence and unintelligence



In general intelligence conceived to be a practical, problem solving, verbal
ability and social competence.



The Similarity in conceptions !
Intelligence Defined:
Views of Scholars &
Test Professional


In symposium published in the Journal of Educational Psychology
(1921), leading psychologist addressed following questions:

1.

What is Intelligence?

2.

How can it be measured?

3.

What can be the next step in the research?
Later years, Spearmen reflected: “In truth, intelligence has
become…a word with many meanings that finally it has none”
On the other, Edwin Boring: “intelligences is what the tests test”,
which was unsatisfactory, incomplete and circular definition.
Francis Galton (1822-1911)
1. First to note the importance of individual
differences.
2. Created the first tests of mental ability.
3. The first to use questionnaires.
4. Created several statistical procedures to
analyze his data, including techniques still in
use today.
5. First person to publish on the Heritability of Intelligence framing
contemporary nature-nurture debate.
6. Galton (1883) believed that most intelligent persons were those with the
best sensory abilities.
7. He observed that “the only information that reaches us concerning
outward events appears to pass through the avenues of our senses, upon
which our judgment and intelligence can act.”
8. Attempted to measure intelligence in sensorimotor and other perceptionrelated test.
Alfred Binet (1857-1911)
1. Most influential
contributions to the field of
psychology were in the
area of intelligence
testing.
2. The first intelligence test
was developed by Alfred
Binet in 1905.
3. Binet did not coin the
term I.Q.
4. Didn’t provide explicit
definition and wrote about
the components of
intelligence.
5. Components: reasoning, judgment, memory, and abstraction.

6. Argued that solving a particular problem and the abilities used
cannot be separated.
DAVID WECHSLER
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
History of the Wechsler Intelligence Scales


One interesting thing to note is that Alfred Binet, the developer of the world's
first intelligence test, also believed that intelligence was far too complex a
subject to be sufficiently described by a single number. The goal of his
original test was to help identify children who needed specialized help in
school and he felt that a variety of individual factors, including a child's level
of motivation, could influence test scores
The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) is
an intelligence test that was first published in 1955
and designed to measure intelligence in adults and
older adolescents. The test was designed by
psychologist David Wechsler who believed that
intelligence was made up a number of different
mental abilities rather than a single general
intelligence factor.
 In a sense, Wechsler's test was a return to many of
the ideas that Binet had also espoused. Instead of
giving a single overall score, the WAIS provided a
profile of the test taker's overall strengths and
weaknesses. One benefit of this approach is that the
pattern of scores can also provide useful
information. For example, scoring high in certain
areas but low in others might indicate the presence
of a specific learning disability.

JEAN PIAGET
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
An Overview of Piaget's Stages of Cognitive
Development


Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development suggests that children move
through four different stages of mental development. His theory focuses not
only on understanding how children acquire knowledge, but also on
understanding the nature of intelligence.
Piaget’s 4 stages of cognitive development
1.Sensori-motor period (from birth until age 2)
--Behavior is organized around its sensory or motor effects
--Culminates in attaining the concept of object permanence.
--Object permanence: understanding that objects have a continued existence
when they disappear from view.
2.Pre-operational stage (from 2-6)
--Characterized by egocentric thought.
--Children cannot adopt alternative viewpoints;
they cannot think from another person’s perspective.

3.Concrete operational stage (6-12)
--Children are able to adopt alternative viewpoints.
--Conservation task: pour water from short, wide glass into tall, thin one
--Concrete operational child understands the amount of water stays the same.
4.Formal operational stage (12 and up)
--Child is not limited to concrete thinking.
--Child can reason abstractly and logically.
Gardner’s
EIGHT INTELLIGENCES
Intelligence
“The capacity to solve problems or to fashion products that are valued in one or more cultural setting.” -Howard
Gardner


The ability to create an effective product or offer a service that is valued in a culture



A set of skills that make it possible for a person to solve problems



The potential for finding or creating solutions for problems which involves gathering new knowledge

Eight Intelligences
-Gardner’s theory supports distinct intelligences, rather than one general ability to think and learn.
-Gardner asserts that the eight intelligences are very thinly connected, and do not rely on or occur as a direct
consequence of one another, but can complement each other as individuals evolve



Linguistic Intelligence - A heightened understanding or sensitivity to spoken and written word.

Attributes
-Strong reader, writer, story-teller
-Ability to memorize words, dates, times
-Easily learns foreign languages


Spatial Intelligence - Potential to understand and use wide space

and small areas
Attributes
-Ability to understand and solve puzzles
-Recognizes patterns in spaces
-Heightened spatial judgment


Logical Intelligence - A heightened sensitivity to numbers, logic and patterns

Attributes
-Ability to analyze problems logically

-Mastery of mathematics
-Proficient at deductive reasoning


Musical Intelligence - Sensitivity to sound, skill in performance, composition and
appreciation of music and rhythm

Attributes
-Recognizes musical pitch and tone

-Understands musical patterns



Bodily Intelligence -Tendency to use one’s body to solve problems

Attributes


-Handles objects confidently and skillfully



-Clear understanding of outcomes of physical action



-Ability to anticipate and learn through muscle memory



Interpersonal Intelligence- Sensitivity to interaction with others

Attributes


-Concerned with other people’s moods, feelings, motivations, desires and temperaments



-Works well and communicates effectively with others
Intrapersonal

Intelligence -Heightened understanding of oneself

Attributes
-Introspective and reflective on emotions, feelings and sensitivities
-Understanding of personal strengths and weaknesses
-Ability to recognize and act on personal motivation
Additional

Intelligences

Gardner has explored two additional intelligences, but maintains evidence of these is not
sufficient based upon his criteria denoting intelligence.
•Naturalistic
•Existential

Intelligence - Sensitivity to natural surroundings

Intelligence - Sensitivity to spirituality or religion

Pros
•The

model broadens our view of the nature of intelligence by adding such factors as those related to social
judgement (the evaluation of others' behaviour) and creativity(divergent thinking).
•All

students will be seen as successful.

•All

different talents of students will be appreciated.

•Meets

individual needs better.

Cons
•Not

standardized

•More

time is needed for evaluating.

•Assessing
•It’s

persons abilities could be cumbersome.

not very conclusive
Other theories of Intelligence
Guillford(1967) – In Guilford's Structure of Intellect (SI) theory,
intelligence is viewed as comprising operations, contents, and products.
There are 5 kinds of operations (cognition, memory, divergent production,
convergent production, evaluation), 6 kinds of products (units, classes,
relations, systems, transformations, and implications), and 5 kinds of
Contents (visual ,auditory, symbolic, semantic, behavioral). Since
each of these dimensions is independent, there are theoretically
150 different components of intelligence.



Thurstone(1938) – Louis L. Thurstone’s Group-factor theory - Instead of viewing intelligence as a single, general
ability, Thurstone's theory focused on seven different "primary mental abilities." Thurstone reified his factors as Primary
Mental Abilities (PMAs).

His basic model of multiple intelligences included seven PMAs.


V - verbal comprehension



W - word fluency



N - number computation



S - spatial visualization



M - associative memory



P - perceptual speed



R – reasoning
THE CHC MODEL
Cattell-Horn-Carroll Model
Cattell–Horn–Carroll theory, or CHC theory ,is a theory of human
cognitive abilities that takes its name from Raymond Cattell, John L.
Horn and John Bissell Carroll.
• CHC theory of cognitive abilities is an amalgamation of two similar
theories about the content and structure of human cognitive abilities.
•The first of these two theories is Gf-Gc theory(Raymond Cattell, 1941;
Horn 1965), and the second is John Carrolls (1993) Three-Stratum
theory.
• These research involved the use of the mathematical technique known
as factor analysis.
• In comparison to other well-known theories of intelligence and cognitive
abilities, CHC theory is the most comprehensive and empirically
supported psychometric theory of the structure of cognitive and academic
abilities.
Intellgence
Intellgence
Crystallized Intelligence (Gc): includes the breadth and depth of
a person's acquired knowledge, the ability to communicate one's
knowledge, and the ability to reason using previously learned
experiences or procedures.
Fluid Intelligence (Gf): includes the broad ability to reason, form
concepts, and solve problems using unfamiliar information or novel
procedures.
 Quantitative Reasoning (Gq): is the ability to comprehend
quantitative concepts and relationships and to manipulate
numerical symbols.
Reading & Writing Ability (Grw): includes basic reading and
writing skills.
 Short-Term Memory (Gsm): is the ability to apprehend and
hold information in immediate awareness and then use it within
a few seconds.
 Long-Term Storage and Retrieval (Glr): is the ability to store
information and fluently retrieve it later in the process of
thinking.
 Visual Processing (Gv): is the ability to perceive, analyze,
synthesize, and think with visual patterns, including the ability
to store and recall visual representations.
 Auditory Processing (Ga): is the ability to analyze,
synthesize, and discriminate auditory stimuli, including the
ability to process and discriminate speech sounds that may be
presented under distorted conditions.
 Processing Speed (Gs): is the ability to perform automatic cognitive
tasks, particularly when measured under pressure to maintain focused
attention.
 Auditory Processing (Ga): is the ability to analyze, synthesize, and
discriminate auditory stimuli, including the ability to process and
discriminate speech sounds that may be presented under distorted
conditions.
 Processing Speed (Gs): is the ability to perform automatic cognitive
tasks, particularly when measured under pressure to maintain focused
attention.
Decision/Reaction Time/Speed (Gt): reflect the immediacy with which
an individual can react to stimuli or a task (typically measured in
seconds or fractions of seconds; not to be confused with Gs, which
typically is measured in intervals of 2–3 minutes).
Intellgence
Intellgence
Intellgence
The Information-Processing View


Derived from work of Russian neuropsychologist Aleksandr Luria



Focus on HOW information is processed than WHAT is processed



2 basic styles of Information-processing styles

Simultaneous processing

(parallel)

Successive processing

(sequential)


Strong influence of Das, who developed the PASS model of intellectual
functionaing



PASS = Planning, Attention, Simultaneous and Successive



Naglieri and Das developed the CAS (Cognitive Assessment System) to tap PASS
factors



Sternberg proposed a triarchic theory of intelligence
Thank you!

More Related Content

ODP
Psychology 102: Intelligence & intelligence assessment
PPT
Intelligence
PPT
Intelligence
PPTX
Intelligence Theories - Two factor theory (Spearman), Primary Mental Abilitie...
PPT
The assessment of intelligence
PPT
Introductory Psychology: Intelligence
PPTX
Fluid and crystallized intelligence
PPT
Intelligence By sameena latheef
Psychology 102: Intelligence & intelligence assessment
Intelligence
Intelligence
Intelligence Theories - Two factor theory (Spearman), Primary Mental Abilitie...
The assessment of intelligence
Introductory Psychology: Intelligence
Fluid and crystallized intelligence
Intelligence By sameena latheef

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Intelligence and its measurements in psychiatry
PPT
Intelligence testing
PPTX
Major theories of intelligence
PPTX
History of intelligence test
PPTX
The Assessment of Intelligence
PPT
theories and Definitions of Intelligence
PPTX
Theories of Intelligence
PPSX
Intelligence testing
PPTX
Intelligence
PPT
Intelligence tests 01
DOCX
“Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test”
PPTX
Intelligence powerpoint
PPT
Intelligence
PPTX
Intelligence
PPT
PSYIntelligence
PPTX
The differential aptitude test (dat)
PPTX
Psychology-INTELLIGENCE
PPTX
Fluid and crystallized intelligence
PPTX
Halstead Reitan & Luria-Nebraska battery
Intelligence and its measurements in psychiatry
Intelligence testing
Major theories of intelligence
History of intelligence test
The Assessment of Intelligence
theories and Definitions of Intelligence
Theories of Intelligence
Intelligence testing
Intelligence
Intelligence tests 01
“Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test”
Intelligence powerpoint
Intelligence
Intelligence
PSYIntelligence
The differential aptitude test (dat)
Psychology-INTELLIGENCE
Fluid and crystallized intelligence
Halstead Reitan & Luria-Nebraska battery
Ad

Viewers also liked (9)

PDF
Regulatory intelligence
PPTX
Intelligence
PPTX
What is intelligence
PPT
Chapter 11 ap psych- Intelligence
PPT
Chapter 11 (intelligence)
PDF
Physiology of emotion
PDF
Culture Fair Intelligence Test (CFIT) Manual
PPT
Intelligence
DOCX
Theories of intelligence
Regulatory intelligence
Intelligence
What is intelligence
Chapter 11 ap psych- Intelligence
Chapter 11 (intelligence)
Physiology of emotion
Culture Fair Intelligence Test (CFIT) Manual
Intelligence
Theories of intelligence
Ad

Similar to Intellgence (20)

PPTX
Unit 7- Intelligence.ppt, presentation- intelligence
PPTX
Intelligence
PPTX
Human Intelligence and education Practice.pptx
PPT
Intellectual development
PPTX
Intelligence
PPTX
Intelligence theories part 1 ,2,3,4
PPTX
1 - Variations in Psychological Attributes (1).pptx
PPTX
Intelligence- Cognitive Processes, Psychology
PPTX
Intelligence presentation
PPTX
Intellectual and Neuropsychological Assessment
PPTX
Intelligence
PPT
Chp 11 Intelli
DOCX
Intelligence(Handouts)
PPTX
Learn about intelligence in Psychology.pptx
PPTX
Assessment of Intellectual Abilities
PPTX
INTELLIGENCE By Tejaswini .psychology.pptx
PPTX
Intelligence
PPTX
Unit 3 intelligence
PPTX
Intelligence
PPTX
THEORIES AND TYPES OF INTELLIGENCE IN PSYCHOLOGY
Unit 7- Intelligence.ppt, presentation- intelligence
Intelligence
Human Intelligence and education Practice.pptx
Intellectual development
Intelligence
Intelligence theories part 1 ,2,3,4
1 - Variations in Psychological Attributes (1).pptx
Intelligence- Cognitive Processes, Psychology
Intelligence presentation
Intellectual and Neuropsychological Assessment
Intelligence
Chp 11 Intelli
Intelligence(Handouts)
Learn about intelligence in Psychology.pptx
Assessment of Intellectual Abilities
INTELLIGENCE By Tejaswini .psychology.pptx
Intelligence
Unit 3 intelligence
Intelligence
THEORIES AND TYPES OF INTELLIGENCE IN PSYCHOLOGY

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Business Ethics Teaching Materials for college
PDF
102 student loan defaulters named and shamed – Is someone you know on the list?
PDF
Classroom Observation Tools for Teachers
PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
PPTX
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
PPTX
Week 4 Term 3 Study Techniques revisited.pptx
PDF
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PPTX
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
PDF
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
PPTX
Introduction to Child Health Nursing – Unit I | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc...
PPTX
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
PDF
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
PPTX
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
PPTX
school management -TNTEU- B.Ed., Semester II Unit 1.pptx
PPTX
Pharmacology of Heart Failure /Pharmacotherapy of CHF
PDF
3rd Neelam Sanjeevareddy Memorial Lecture.pdf
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PDF
2.FourierTransform-ShortQuestionswithAnswers.pdf
PDF
TR - Agricultural Crops Production NC III.pdf
Business Ethics Teaching Materials for college
102 student loan defaulters named and shamed – Is someone you know on the list?
Classroom Observation Tools for Teachers
master seminar digital applications in india
STATICS OF THE RIGID BODIES Hibbelers.pdf
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
Week 4 Term 3 Study Techniques revisited.pptx
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
Institutional Correction lecture only . . .
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
Introduction to Child Health Nursing – Unit I | Child Health Nursing I | B.Sc...
Renaissance Architecture: A Journey from Faith to Humanism
Abdominal Access Techniques with Prof. Dr. R K Mishra
Final Presentation General Medicine 03-08-2024.pptx
school management -TNTEU- B.Ed., Semester II Unit 1.pptx
Pharmacology of Heart Failure /Pharmacotherapy of CHF
3rd Neelam Sanjeevareddy Memorial Lecture.pdf
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
2.FourierTransform-ShortQuestionswithAnswers.pdf
TR - Agricultural Crops Production NC III.pdf

Intellgence

  • 1. Intelligence •Information Defined : Galton, Binet, Piaget, Wechsler •Factor-Analytic •Information Theories: Spearman, Gardner, Cattell-Horn-Carrol Processing View
  • 3.  Intelligence includes : 1. Acquire and apply knowledge 2. Reason logically 3. Plan effectively 4. Infer perceptively 5. Make sound judgements and solve problems 6. Grasp and visualize concepts 7. Pay attention 8. Be intuitive 9. Find the right words and thoughts with facility 10. Cope with, adjust to, and make the most of new situations
  • 4. Intelligence defined: views of the Lay Public  Research by Sternberg and his associates on how laypeople and psychologists defined intelligence  Study of 476 people (randomly selected) asked to list behaviours related to – intelligence, academic intelligence, everyday intelligence and unintelligence  In general intelligence conceived to be a practical, problem solving, verbal ability and social competence.  The Similarity in conceptions !
  • 5. Intelligence Defined: Views of Scholars & Test Professional
  • 6.  In symposium published in the Journal of Educational Psychology (1921), leading psychologist addressed following questions: 1. What is Intelligence? 2. How can it be measured? 3. What can be the next step in the research? Later years, Spearmen reflected: “In truth, intelligence has become…a word with many meanings that finally it has none” On the other, Edwin Boring: “intelligences is what the tests test”, which was unsatisfactory, incomplete and circular definition.
  • 7. Francis Galton (1822-1911) 1. First to note the importance of individual differences. 2. Created the first tests of mental ability. 3. The first to use questionnaires. 4. Created several statistical procedures to analyze his data, including techniques still in use today.
  • 8. 5. First person to publish on the Heritability of Intelligence framing contemporary nature-nurture debate. 6. Galton (1883) believed that most intelligent persons were those with the best sensory abilities. 7. He observed that “the only information that reaches us concerning outward events appears to pass through the avenues of our senses, upon which our judgment and intelligence can act.” 8. Attempted to measure intelligence in sensorimotor and other perceptionrelated test.
  • 9. Alfred Binet (1857-1911) 1. Most influential contributions to the field of psychology were in the area of intelligence testing. 2. The first intelligence test was developed by Alfred Binet in 1905. 3. Binet did not coin the term I.Q. 4. Didn’t provide explicit definition and wrote about the components of intelligence.
  • 10. 5. Components: reasoning, judgment, memory, and abstraction. 6. Argued that solving a particular problem and the abilities used cannot be separated.
  • 11. DAVID WECHSLER Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
  • 12. History of the Wechsler Intelligence Scales  One interesting thing to note is that Alfred Binet, the developer of the world's first intelligence test, also believed that intelligence was far too complex a subject to be sufficiently described by a single number. The goal of his original test was to help identify children who needed specialized help in school and he felt that a variety of individual factors, including a child's level of motivation, could influence test scores
  • 13. The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) is an intelligence test that was first published in 1955 and designed to measure intelligence in adults and older adolescents. The test was designed by psychologist David Wechsler who believed that intelligence was made up a number of different mental abilities rather than a single general intelligence factor.  In a sense, Wechsler's test was a return to many of the ideas that Binet had also espoused. Instead of giving a single overall score, the WAIS provided a profile of the test taker's overall strengths and weaknesses. One benefit of this approach is that the pattern of scores can also provide useful information. For example, scoring high in certain areas but low in others might indicate the presence of a specific learning disability. 
  • 15. An Overview of Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development  Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development suggests that children move through four different stages of mental development. His theory focuses not only on understanding how children acquire knowledge, but also on understanding the nature of intelligence.
  • 16. Piaget’s 4 stages of cognitive development 1.Sensori-motor period (from birth until age 2) --Behavior is organized around its sensory or motor effects --Culminates in attaining the concept of object permanence. --Object permanence: understanding that objects have a continued existence when they disappear from view. 2.Pre-operational stage (from 2-6) --Characterized by egocentric thought. --Children cannot adopt alternative viewpoints; they cannot think from another person’s perspective. 3.Concrete operational stage (6-12) --Children are able to adopt alternative viewpoints. --Conservation task: pour water from short, wide glass into tall, thin one --Concrete operational child understands the amount of water stays the same. 4.Formal operational stage (12 and up) --Child is not limited to concrete thinking. --Child can reason abstractly and logically.
  • 18. Intelligence “The capacity to solve problems or to fashion products that are valued in one or more cultural setting.” -Howard Gardner  The ability to create an effective product or offer a service that is valued in a culture  A set of skills that make it possible for a person to solve problems  The potential for finding or creating solutions for problems which involves gathering new knowledge Eight Intelligences -Gardner’s theory supports distinct intelligences, rather than one general ability to think and learn. -Gardner asserts that the eight intelligences are very thinly connected, and do not rely on or occur as a direct consequence of one another, but can complement each other as individuals evolve  Linguistic Intelligence - A heightened understanding or sensitivity to spoken and written word. Attributes -Strong reader, writer, story-teller -Ability to memorize words, dates, times -Easily learns foreign languages  Spatial Intelligence - Potential to understand and use wide space and small areas Attributes -Ability to understand and solve puzzles -Recognizes patterns in spaces -Heightened spatial judgment
  • 19.  Logical Intelligence - A heightened sensitivity to numbers, logic and patterns Attributes -Ability to analyze problems logically -Mastery of mathematics -Proficient at deductive reasoning  Musical Intelligence - Sensitivity to sound, skill in performance, composition and appreciation of music and rhythm Attributes -Recognizes musical pitch and tone -Understands musical patterns  Bodily Intelligence -Tendency to use one’s body to solve problems Attributes  -Handles objects confidently and skillfully  -Clear understanding of outcomes of physical action  -Ability to anticipate and learn through muscle memory  Interpersonal Intelligence- Sensitivity to interaction with others Attributes  -Concerned with other people’s moods, feelings, motivations, desires and temperaments  -Works well and communicates effectively with others
  • 20. Intrapersonal Intelligence -Heightened understanding of oneself Attributes -Introspective and reflective on emotions, feelings and sensitivities -Understanding of personal strengths and weaknesses -Ability to recognize and act on personal motivation Additional Intelligences Gardner has explored two additional intelligences, but maintains evidence of these is not sufficient based upon his criteria denoting intelligence. •Naturalistic •Existential Intelligence - Sensitivity to natural surroundings Intelligence - Sensitivity to spirituality or religion Pros •The model broadens our view of the nature of intelligence by adding such factors as those related to social judgement (the evaluation of others' behaviour) and creativity(divergent thinking). •All students will be seen as successful. •All different talents of students will be appreciated. •Meets individual needs better. Cons •Not standardized •More time is needed for evaluating. •Assessing •It’s persons abilities could be cumbersome. not very conclusive
  • 21. Other theories of Intelligence Guillford(1967) – In Guilford's Structure of Intellect (SI) theory, intelligence is viewed as comprising operations, contents, and products. There are 5 kinds of operations (cognition, memory, divergent production, convergent production, evaluation), 6 kinds of products (units, classes, relations, systems, transformations, and implications), and 5 kinds of Contents (visual ,auditory, symbolic, semantic, behavioral). Since each of these dimensions is independent, there are theoretically 150 different components of intelligence.  Thurstone(1938) – Louis L. Thurstone’s Group-factor theory - Instead of viewing intelligence as a single, general ability, Thurstone's theory focused on seven different "primary mental abilities." Thurstone reified his factors as Primary Mental Abilities (PMAs). His basic model of multiple intelligences included seven PMAs.  V - verbal comprehension  W - word fluency  N - number computation  S - spatial visualization  M - associative memory  P - perceptual speed  R – reasoning
  • 23. Cattell–Horn–Carroll theory, or CHC theory ,is a theory of human cognitive abilities that takes its name from Raymond Cattell, John L. Horn and John Bissell Carroll. • CHC theory of cognitive abilities is an amalgamation of two similar theories about the content and structure of human cognitive abilities. •The first of these two theories is Gf-Gc theory(Raymond Cattell, 1941; Horn 1965), and the second is John Carrolls (1993) Three-Stratum theory. • These research involved the use of the mathematical technique known as factor analysis. • In comparison to other well-known theories of intelligence and cognitive abilities, CHC theory is the most comprehensive and empirically supported psychometric theory of the structure of cognitive and academic abilities.
  • 26. Crystallized Intelligence (Gc): includes the breadth and depth of a person's acquired knowledge, the ability to communicate one's knowledge, and the ability to reason using previously learned experiences or procedures. Fluid Intelligence (Gf): includes the broad ability to reason, form concepts, and solve problems using unfamiliar information or novel procedures.  Quantitative Reasoning (Gq): is the ability to comprehend quantitative concepts and relationships and to manipulate numerical symbols. Reading & Writing Ability (Grw): includes basic reading and writing skills.
  • 27.  Short-Term Memory (Gsm): is the ability to apprehend and hold information in immediate awareness and then use it within a few seconds.  Long-Term Storage and Retrieval (Glr): is the ability to store information and fluently retrieve it later in the process of thinking.  Visual Processing (Gv): is the ability to perceive, analyze, synthesize, and think with visual patterns, including the ability to store and recall visual representations.  Auditory Processing (Ga): is the ability to analyze, synthesize, and discriminate auditory stimuli, including the ability to process and discriminate speech sounds that may be presented under distorted conditions.
  • 28.  Processing Speed (Gs): is the ability to perform automatic cognitive tasks, particularly when measured under pressure to maintain focused attention.  Auditory Processing (Ga): is the ability to analyze, synthesize, and discriminate auditory stimuli, including the ability to process and discriminate speech sounds that may be presented under distorted conditions.  Processing Speed (Gs): is the ability to perform automatic cognitive tasks, particularly when measured under pressure to maintain focused attention. Decision/Reaction Time/Speed (Gt): reflect the immediacy with which an individual can react to stimuli or a task (typically measured in seconds or fractions of seconds; not to be confused with Gs, which typically is measured in intervals of 2–3 minutes).
  • 32. The Information-Processing View  Derived from work of Russian neuropsychologist Aleksandr Luria  Focus on HOW information is processed than WHAT is processed  2 basic styles of Information-processing styles Simultaneous processing (parallel) Successive processing (sequential)
  • 33.  Strong influence of Das, who developed the PASS model of intellectual functionaing  PASS = Planning, Attention, Simultaneous and Successive  Naglieri and Das developed the CAS (Cognitive Assessment System) to tap PASS factors  Sternberg proposed a triarchic theory of intelligence