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Middle Adulthood: Cognitive Development, Study notes of Cognitive Development

Middle Adulthood: Cognitive Development. ▫ What is Intelligence? ▫ Studying Intelligence During the 20th Century. ▫ Cross-Sectional Research.

Typology: Study notes

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/27/2022

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Middle Adulthood: Cognitive Development
What is Intelligence?
Studying Intelligence During the 20
th
Century
Cross-Sectional Research
Longitudinal Research
Cross-Sequential Research
Two Clusters: Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence
Three Forms of Intelligence: Sternberg
Selective Gains and Losses
What is Intelligence?
For most of twentieth century, scientists and public
assumed there was such a thing as intelligence, with
general intelligence thought to be a single entity
Now scientists believe it is more useful to look at
adult intelligence as several distinct intellectual
capacities
Studying Intelligence During the Twentieth Century
Psychometricians disagreed about whether general
intelligence rises or falls after age 20 or so
Cross-Sectional Research
For first half of the twentieth century, psychologists
were convinced, based on solid evidence, that
intelligence declined over time
a classic cross-sectional study found that the
average male:
reached his intellectual peak at about age 18
intellectual decline began in mid-20s
hundreds of other cross-sectional studies in many
nations also found younger adults outscored older
adults on measures of intelligence
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Middle Adulthood: Cognitive Development

 What is Intelligence?

 Studying Intelligence During the 20th^ Century

 Cross-Sectional Research

 Longitudinal Research

 Cross-Sequential Research

 Two Clusters: Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence

 Three Forms of Intelligence: Sternberg

 Selective Gains and Losses

What is Intelligence?

 For most of twentieth century, scientists and public assumed there was such a thing as intelligence, with general intelligence thought to be a single entity

 Now scientists believe it is more useful to look at adult intelligence as several distinct intellectual capacities

Studying Intelligence During the Twentieth Century

 Psychometricians disagreed about whether general intelligence rises or falls after age 20 or so

Cross-Sectional Research  For first half of the twentieth century, psychologists were convinced, based on solid evidence, that intelligence declined over time  a classic cross-sectional study found that the average male:  reached his intellectual peak at about age 18  intellectual decline began in mid-20s  hundreds of other cross-sectional studies in many nations also found younger adults outscored older adults on measures of intelligence

Longitudinal Research

 In 1955, Nancy Bayley and Melita Oden analyzed adult intelligence of child geniuses who had grown up  Found that most of the 36-year-olds were still improving in vocabulary, comprehension, and information

 Bayley wondered whether this group’s high intelligence during childhood had protected them from age-related decline

 After further research, Bayley concluded:

 intellectual learning is unimpaired through age 36 and beyond

 Longitudinal research showed that, over time, intellectual growth resulted from:  improvements in quality and extent of public education  variety of cultural opportunities  expanded media information  Bayley’s research also showed:  older adults previously tested often did not go beyond 8th grade and so did not fully develop their intelligence  each generation scores higher on IQ tests because each is better educated

Cross-Sequential Research  Longitudinal research is better than cross-sectional, but still not perfect  Schaie combined the two, his new design is called cross-sequential research  he tested cross-section of 500 adults of different age groups on 5 standard primary mental abilities = foundations of intelligence  verbal meaning, spatial orientation, inductive reasoning, number ability, and word fluency

Three Forms of Intelligence: Sternberg

  1. Analytic  mental processes that foster academic proficiency by making possible efficient learning, remembering, and thinking  involves abstract planning, strategy selection, focused attention, and information processing
  2. Creative Intelligence  involves capacity to be intellectually flexible and innovative in new situations  divergent = diverse, innovative, and unusual solutions
  3. Practical Intelligence

 involves capacity to adapt one’s behavior to the contextual demands of a given situation  includes accurate grasp of expectations and needs of people involved and an awareness of skills needed

Selective Gains and Losses

 Many researchers believe that adults make deliberate choices about their intellectual development, separate from their culture or education