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Peer reviewedFavero, Jane; And Others – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1975
Scores, hypothesized abilities and Scales on the Lorge-Thorndike Intelligence Tests (LT), Multi-Level Edition, were intercorrelated and factor analyzed to determine overlap of structure-of-intellect (SOI) ability measure, their degree of relationship with LT scales, and the possible presence of second order factors. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Individual Testing, Intelligence
Peer reviewedGold, Ann E.; And Others – Intelligence, 1995
Whether IQ level exerts a differential effect on the impairment of cognitive performance induced during acute hypoglycemia was studied for 24 nondiabetic adults. At various levels of hypoglycemia, no overall effect of IQ on deterioration was noted. Higher IQ did not apparently protect against adverse effects. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Processes, Diabetes, Individual Differences
Van Der Maas, Han L. J.; Dolan, Conor V.; Grasman, Raoul P. P. P.; Wicherts, Jelte M.; Huizenga, Hilde M.; Raijmakers, Maartje E. J. – Psychological Review, 2006
Scores on cognitive tasks used in intelligence tests correlate positively with each other, that is, they display a positive manifold of correlations. The positive manifold is often explained by positing a dominant latent variable, the g factor, associated with a single quantitative cognitive or biological process or capacity. In this article, a…
Descriptors: Models, Intelligence, Intelligence Tests, Cognitive Ability
Woodcock, Richard W. – 1995
This paper describes five major conceptualizations of intelligence as: (1) a general ability; (2) a pair of abilities; (3) a limited set of multiple intelligences; (4) a complete set of multiple intelligences; and (5) a set of interacting cognitive and noncognitive factors that determine cognitive performance. Theories of multiple intelligence…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Intelligence
Perrotin, Audrey; Tournelle, Lydia; Isingrini, Michel – Brain and Cognition, 2008
The study focused on the cognitive determinants of the accuracy of feeling-of-knowing (FOK) judgments made on episodic memory information. An individual differences approach was used on a sample of healthy older adults assessed on an episodic FOK task and on several neuropsychological measures. At a global level of analysis of FOK accuracy, the…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences
Mayer, John D.; Salovey, Peter; Caruso, David R. – American Psychologist, 2008
Some individuals have a greater capacity than others to carry out sophisticated information processing about emotions and emotion-relevant stimuli and to use this information as a guide to thinking and behavior. The authors have termed this set of abilities emotional intelligence (EI). Since the introduction of the concept, however, a schism has…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Personality Traits, Researchers, Cognitive Processes
De Pascalis, V.; Varriale, V.; Matteoli, A. – Intelligence, 2008
The relationship between fluid intelligence (indexed by scores on Raven Progressive Matrices) and auditory discrimination ability was examined by recording event-related potentials from 48 women during the performance of an auditory oddball task with backward masking. High ability (HA) subjects exhibited shorter response times, greater response…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Auditory Discrimination, Ability Grouping, Females
Lightbody, Amy A.; Reiss, Allan L. – Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2009
Fragile X syndrome (FraX) remains the most common inherited cause of intellectual disability and provides a valuable model for studying gene-brain-behavior relationships. Over the past 15 years, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies have emerged with the goal of better understanding the neural pathways contributing to the…
Descriptors: Genetic Disorders, Mental Retardation, Genetics, Brain
Fogel, Krista – Exceptionality Education International, 2009
This paper focuses on the concept of extracognition. It reports a qualitative study that explored the perceived experiences of doing science with an artistic spirit through the voices of living scientists who also engage in the arts. The purpose was to understand how accomplished scientists who engage in the arts make sense out of their experience…
Descriptors: Fine Arts, Hermeneutics, Scientists, Phenomenology
Kaufman, Scott Barry; DeYoung, Caroline G.; Gray, Jeremy R.; Jimenez, Luis; Brown, Jamie; Mackintosh, Nicholas – Cognition, 2010
The ability to automatically and implicitly detect complex and noisy regularities in the environment is a fundamental aspect of human cognition. Despite considerable interest in implicit processes, few researchers have conceptualized implicit learning as an ability with meaningful individual differences. Instead, various researchers (e.g., Reber,…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Structural Equation Models, Associative Learning, Personality
Peer reviewedCohen, Ronald L.; Gowen, Anne – Intelligence, 1978
Two experiments examined whether correlations between IQ and probed serial running memory depend on IQ-related individual differences in the retention of order information in short-term memory. Children's IQ correlated with memory, regardless of whether instructions emphasized serial or free recall; and with recent item but not recent order…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Individual Differences
Casasanto, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2009
Do people with different kinds of bodies think differently? According to the "body-specificity hypothesis," people who interact with their physical environments in systematically different ways should form correspondingly different mental representations. In a test of this hypothesis, 5 experiments investigated links between handedness and the…
Descriptors: Handedness, Cognitive Processes, Physical Environment, Hypothesis Testing
Guernsey, Lisa – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Computers may not be able to master poetics like Aristotle, but they have become smart enough to know a metaphor when they see one. An online database called The Mind Is a Metaphor, created by Brad Pasanek, an assistant professor of English at the University of Virginia, is a searchable bank of phrases, verses, and lines from literature that…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Databases, Computers, Online Systems
Peer reviewedCeci, Stephen J. – Intelligence, 1990
The assumption that a singular biological resource pool embedded in the central nervous system results in differences in macrolevel outcomes because of the constraints it imposes on efficiencies of microlevel processing is refuted. Moderating effects on the causal pathways between microlevel and macrolevel performance are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Cognitive Processes, Environmental Influences, Epistemology
Peer reviewedHunt, Earl; And Others – Cognitive Psychology, 1975
Although a verbal intelligence test is directly a measure of what people know, it is indirectly a way of identifying people who can code and manipulate verbal stimuli rapidly in situations in which knowledge per se is not a major factor. (Author/BJG)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences, Intelligence, Intelligence Tests

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