Back to AI Flashcard MakerPsychology /Psychological - Lecture 6 Individual & Group Differences (Catherine)

Psychological - Lecture 6 Individual & Group Differences (Catherine)

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Intelligence testing covers key areas such as the stability and variability of IQ over time, individual and group differences influenced by factors like age, gender, socioeconomic status, and ethnicity. It also considers phenomena like the Flynn effect and examines both intellectual disabilities and giftedness beyond average norms.

Provide an overview of the key areas related to Intelligence testing & IQ ability

IQ stability & instability

Individual differences in intellectual ability & IQ

Group differences in intellectual ability & IQ

Age, The Flynn-effect, cross-sectional vs longitudinal studies

Gender

SES

Race/ethnicity/indigene

Beyond the norms:

Intellectual ability

Intellectually gifted

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

Provide an overview of the key areas related to Intelligence testing & IQ ability

IQ stability & instability

Individual differences in intellectual ability & IQ

Group differences in intellectual ability & ...

Provide evidence that Group scores in IQ remain stable over time

*Individual’s test scores remains relatively stable after the age of 6 years:

1. 3rd grade school boys (n=613) reassessed 10 years later: r= ...

What are the implications that Group scores in IQ remain stable over time?

Implications:

*Good Predictive Validity of the tests

OR

*Predictive Validity of IQ tests is confounded with stability of the envi...

Why are group IQ scores more stable with age?

Possible explanations are:

Cumulative nature of intellectual development

Environmental stability

Prerequisite learning skills

Provide evidence that Individual IQ scores can be more unstable over time

California Guidance study (n=222)

*6yr vs 18 yr - test-retest correlations were high (around 0.60)

*59% of children IQ increased by up ...

What are some of the factors affecting a child’s intellectual development?

Change in family structure/home

Poor home conditions

Change in parents SES

Adoption

Severe or prolonged illness

Thera...

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TermDefinition

Provide an overview of the key areas related to Intelligence testing & IQ ability

IQ stability & instability

Individual differences in intellectual ability & IQ

Group differences in intellectual ability & IQ

Age, The Flynn-effect, cross-sectional vs longitudinal studies

Gender

SES

Race/ethnicity/indigene

Beyond the norms:

Intellectual ability

Intellectually gifted

Provide evidence that Group scores in IQ remain stable over time

*Individual’s test scores remains relatively stable after the age of 6 years:

1. 3rd grade school boys (n=613) reassessed 10 years later: r= 0.72

2. 13yr old (n=4500) reassessed at 18 years: r= 0.78

3. 3yr old reassessed at 4 years: r= 0.83 (very good)

3yr old reassessed at 12 years: r= 0.46 (not so good- a lot has changed in the 9 year period)

4. 2-5.5 yr old reassessed 10 years later: r= 0.65, 25 years later: r=0.85 (very good!) overall r=0.59

*By about 16-18 years of age, IQ remains pretty stable

What are the implications that Group scores in IQ remain stable over time?

Implications:

*Good Predictive Validity of the tests

OR

*Predictive Validity of IQ tests is confounded with stability of the environment of longitudinal studies

Why are group IQ scores more stable with age?

Possible explanations are:

Cumulative nature of intellectual development

Environmental stability

Prerequisite learning skills

Provide evidence that Individual IQ scores can be more unstable over time

California Guidance study (n=222)

*6yr vs 18 yr - test-retest correlations were high (around 0.60)

*59% of children IQ increased by up to 15

*37% of children IQ increased by up to 20

*9% of children IQ increased by up to 30!!!

This is incredible!

What are some of the factors affecting a child’s intellectual development?

Change in family structure/home

Poor home conditions

Change in parents SES

Adoption

Severe or prolonged illness

Therapeutic, remedial, educational or counselling intervention programmes

When viewing the correlation between IQ scores compared at different time periods, what is an important consideration?

The correlation tells us the variance is the same/stable

The correlation does not tell us that someone with an IQ of 100 still has an IQ of 100 10 years on, merely that the group overall is consistent

What did Capron & Duyme find from their 1989 Adoption study published in Nature?

Children reared by higher SES parents had a higher IQ

Change enhances IQ independent of the SES of the biological parent

SES of biological parent does have some effect

What have been the findings of some longitudinal studies into the effect of SES on IQ score?

without early intervention in low SES groups, IQ score declines from the baseline over time

In High SES groups, IQ score increases from the baseline over time

The Rochester Longitudinal Study by Sameroff et al., (1987, 1993) found 10 risk factors associated with decreases in IQ score. What were these?

mother had history of mental illness

Mother did not go to high school

Mother had severe anxiety

Mother had rigid attitudes

Few mother-child interactions

Head of household in semi-skilled job

> more than 4 siblings

Father not living at home

Child belongs to a minority group

Family had > (more than) 20 stressful events in child’s 1st 4 years (!)

What was the impact for the children in the Rochester Longitudinal Study by Sameroff et al., (1987, 1993) who had 4 or more of the risk factors?

Those children had decreased IQ in the retest phase (1993)

What do we need to bear in mind when considering Group and individual differences of Age, Gender, Culture/Race, Indigene?

Our results should be stratified by age, gender, culture in the standardisation process as a result it is important that we do not compare one group with another, as this can lead to inappropriate interpretations.

*For instance, we recognise & accept gender differences in the sub-sets, but the overall IQ score is standardised according to group norms so should not have differences

How are IQ scores standardised by age?

IQ scores are standardised by 9 age groups from age 16 through to 74 years old

The WAIS uses raw scores on the sub-sets but the overall IQ score is standardised according to group norms

What are the standardised scores for IQ tests?

96% range between 70 - 130

68% range between 85 - 115

0.1% have an IQ 55 or below

2% have an IQ 70 or below

14% have an IQ between 71 - 84

34% have an IQ between 85 - 99

34% have an IQ between 100 - 114

14% have an IQ between 115 - 129

2% have an IQ 130 -145

0.1% have an IQ above 146

Why is it inappropriate to compare IQ scores across ages?

It is not meaningful to compare a 17 year old with a 70 year old because of age related changes in IQ

The IQ scores must be standardised by cohort not across the age range.

What are the main findings from Cross-Sectional analysis of Age-related changes in IQ?

Verbal scores (crystallised intelligence) remain stable with age

NonVerbal scores (fluid intelligence) declines with age

What are the main limitations of Cross-sectional studies?

They are confounded by changes in culture and age

even one generation has seen significant changes in healthcare, diet, technology, media, educational opportunities

What are the strengths and weaknesses of a Longitudinal design?

weakness:

practice effects

small IQ increase on retest

age related (old people = less increase)

practice effect up to 4 months

studies have recorded high increase following practice effect

is practice effect an artefact?

Selective attrition

some people more likely to remain

higher IQ associated with longer life & motivation

Strengths:

continuation of individuals

What was ideal about the Seattle Longitudinal Study?

It was a Cross-Sequential Design, (AKA cohort sequential) which incorporates the best elements of a Cross-sectional and a Longitudinal

What were the key the design aspects of the Seattle Longitudinal Study?

1956 took 200 adult participants

re-assessed & re-recruited every 7 years

Cross-sectional: comparison of ages

Longitudinal: continuation of individual
6000 people participated

26 of the original 200 remained

got data from 3 generations

What were the key findings of the Seattle Longitudinal Studyr?

*No uniform pattern in age-related change across ALL intellectual abilities (The Full IQ scale is not sufficient to measure this)

*Important interactions between: ability x age & ability x cohort were found which complicated things

*Gender differences were found

*Cross Sectional Studies over-estimate declines in intellectual ability prior to age 60

*Individual differences in successful ageing:

no heart disease, high SES, good environment, flexible personality, high cognitive status of spouse, maintenance of high processing speeds

What were the key findings of the Seattle Longitudinal Study related to Crystallised & Fluid intelligence over age?
Where Crystallised intelligence is accumulated information & verbal skills, which increase for age
& fluid intelligence is the ability to reason abstractly, which steadily declines from middle adulthood onwards

Men decline earlier on crystallised intelligence whereas

Women decline earlier on fluid measures

Women are concerned with accuracy

Men are concerned with speed

What are the main changes in Intellectual ability as found by the Seattle Longitudinal Study?

Before 60 there is not a huge decline in ability by group

The main area of decline is that of perceptual processing speed (which incidentally will negatively impact all speeded tests)

The other areas of intelligence: Reason, spatial, number, vocab and verbal memory do not decline dramatically

The Seattle Longitudinal Study implemented Cognitive Training for their participants, what was the outcome?

Two-thirds of the sample improved intellectual ability

A Crucial finding was that cognitive training interventions reduces age related decline immensely.

The more cognitively active we are, the better we maintain our cognitive ability

NB Sleep is also crucial to intellectual functioning

What are the key points of the Flynn-Effect?

IQ tends to increase by 3 points every decade

This is why we cannot be compared against a 20 year old who took the test 30 years ago

Need to constantly re-norm scores to account for cohort changes

What are the possible explanations for the Flynn-Effect?

*Participant Characteristics - increase education, increased familiarity with IQ tests

Methodological explanations - Changes in measure (e.g. WAIS to WAIS IV), change in motivation, effort, change of environmental factors (constant improvements),

*Biological explanation - improved nutrition, infectious diseases, heterosis (the opposite of inbreeding)

*The Flynn-Effect may reverse as we may get lazy with all the constant access to data

There are 3 key studies that explored IQ sex differences, what were the studies, and what did they find?

The studies found that men had higher 'g' than women

3-4 IQ points - Lynn (1992)

5 IQ points - Lynn & Irwin (2004)

3.63 IQ points - Jackson & Rushton (2006)

What did Hedges & Nowell (1995) find about sex differences in IQ?

Results are dependent upon which tests are used:

Sex differences are small & stable over time

Males have a larger variance (there are more males at the higher & lower ends of the IQ scale)

Males typically outnumber females among high-scorers

Women show advantages in memory, reading, verbal fluency,

Women outnumber men at University

When considering Group Differences in Sex and IQ scoring what are the key points?

*Sex differences in IQ exist

*They are small but relatively stable over time

*There are sex differences in scores of sub-sets

*It is not psychometrically sound to compare women & men overall IQ as the tests are designed not to skew towards gender

*Males typically do better than females in non-verbal performance IQ tests & 'g'

*Women show advantages in memory, reading, vocabulary

Age and Sex interacts: Women decline earlier in 'active' abilities, whereas Men decline earlier in 'passive' abilities

When considering Intelligence and Culture and Race what are the key points?

Cultural Differences Exist - But is this really a factor of IQ or is it more that the Main problem is that Tests are skewed toward English-speaking, middle-class populations

Words for snow - fairer for Eskimos

Culture fair tests of intelligence or adapted standard test

We cannot measure across culture and expect fairness

When considering Intelligence and Culture and Race what is the Bell Curve Controversy?

Jensen (1969) and Hernstein & Murray (1994) presented evidence that black Americans were less intelligent than white Americans on standardised intelligence tests

This was interpreted as white Americans being innately more intelligent (genes of white Americans were higher IQ)

Dickins & Flynn (2005) looked at IQ from 1972 - 2002 found Black Americans have gained approx 5.5 IQ points

Black Americans have only recently gained access to educational & other opportunities

SES may be more relevant than Race

Environmental causation

individual scores vary considerably

Stereotype threat: fear of confirming negative stereotype can raise anxiety during testing

Why might the distribution of IQ for the indigenous Population be shifted to the left of the distribution as compared to the distribution of non-indigenous people?

*There is no difference between European indigenous and Australian indigenous people

*the findings do not control for:

-schooling

-parenting style

-culture - no culture free tests of IQ

-nutrition & health care gap

These issues change everything: all tests are skewed to white, middle-class, Western North Americans, how can an indigenous person be expected to perform equally?

When considering Intelligence and Culture and Race what is the pattern for specific social groups in USA, is it a Bell Curve?

US Population distribution - bell curve

all other groups negative slope:

Ever incarcerated: peaks at 75-90

for every other group majority score at below 75

Poverty

Chronic welfare recipient

Had illegitimate baby

High school drop out

When considering Test Bias, what do we need to be aware of with regard Group and individual differences of Age, Gender, Culture/Race, Indigene?

People from a different culture than the culture the test was designed for will always be disadvantaged

Methodological issues may confound significant differences (need to dissociate group differences from test bias)

Race, Ethnicity & Gender differences are all affected by test bias

Bias in Content Validity - does the test measure what it is supposed to measure for different groups?

Bias in Predictive-Criterion-Validity - does the test provide a valid prediction of ALL individuals future performance?

Bias in Construct-Validity - does the test result provide meaningful insight into current theory for ALL cultures equally?

What is the Floor and Ceiling of IQ tests? and, What is the IQ value associated with intellectual giftedness, and intellectual disability?

Floor = 40

- Profound =<20-35

- Severe = 20-35

- Moderate = 35-50

- Mild = 50-70

intellectual disability = below 70

intellectual giftedness = above 130

Ceiling = 145

What are Learning Disabilities?

Impairments in speech, language, or reading

not always defects in general intelligence

they are deficits in specific abilities

such as those tested in the factor-analyses theories of intelligence (Spearman, etc)

Nomenclature (the principle of naming)

-Intellectual disability (ID) used to be referred to as MR (Mental Retardation) from the Latin for moving slowly

this is now seen as derogatory so name changed

Give the American Association on Intellectual & Developmental Disability (AAIDD) definition of Learning Disabilities

Intellectual disability is a disability characterised by significant limitation both in intellectual functioning and in adaptive behaviour as expressed in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills

NB: Disability must originate prior to age of 18 years

Give the American Association on Intellectual & Developmental Disability (AAIDD) definition of Learning Disabilities

Intellectual disability is a disability characterised by significant limitation both in intellectual functioning and in adaptive behaviour as expressed in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills

NB: Disability must originate prior to age of 18 years

What are the conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills included in the AAIDD definition of Learning Disabilities that people need to function in their everyday lives?

Conceptual

-receptive & expressive language, reading & writing, money concepts, self-direction

Social

-Interpersonal, responsibility, self-esteem, gullibility, naivete, following rules, obeying laws & avoiding victimisation

Practical

Eating, dressing, mobility, toileting, taking medication, using telephone, managing transportation, housekeeping

maintaining a safe environment

What is the prevalence of intellectual disability in Australia & what are the implications for people with an intellectual disability?

5-3% of Australian population are intellectually disabled in some way

5-7% of the population have borderline ID

Mild intellectually disabled children are often indistinguishable from others until adolescence when they have problems with more advanced academic work

85% of those with ID are mildly disabled

Moderately disabled can benefit from vocational training

95% of people with ID can hold jobs and live in the community

What are some of the causes of Intellectual Disability?

ID is caused by any condition that impairs development of the brain before birth or during childhood

There are several 100 causes, most common affect 60% of all those with ID

Chromosomal: Downs Syndrome, Fragile X

Prenatal factors: Foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)

Perinatal Factors (During birth): starved of oxygen

Post-natal factors

What are some of the legal implications of having (or not having) a diagnosis of Intellectual Disability?

*ID is over-represented in Criminal Justice System - (10%) yet only 3% of population

more easily led & prosecuted,

more keen to appease

exaggerated willingness to talk

22% of falsely convicted people had ID

poor comprehension of causality

73% of ID individuals did not understand their statements could be used against them

-Is the USA, 20% of individuals put to death had ID, despite the supreme court ruling that ID was mitigating
26 states have now enacted legislation protecting ID individuals from execution

Bearing in mind some of the legal implications of having (or not having) a diagnosis of Intellectual Disability, why would someone fake it?

3 points can be difference between death penalty or not; having to do military service; or getting specialist health, educational benefits or supports

Hall & Pritchatard (1997) showed that both incarcerated young offenders & postgraduate students could 'fake' IQ tests to score less than 69, however, it was identifiable

Almstrom et al., (2008) showed the composite scores differentiate borderline ID and intellectual impairment

What are the implications of the Flynn-Effect for individuals with Intellectual Disability?

Educational implications: when IQ tests are newly normed assistance increases

Financial Implications

Legal Implication

because: if not re-normed the IQ cut off of 70 in 1974 captured 2.27%, in 1991 it would only capture 0.94% for all the reasons below

IQ changes 0.311 points/year

IQ changes 3 points/decade

IQ has changed 14.31 points over 45 years

The difference between the WISC-R & WISC-III = 5.3 points

What is the prevalence of Intellectual Disability & criminal offending behaviours, and what are some of the caveats around these data?

Prevalence of ID among adult & juvenile correction centres

USA up to 19.1%

UK 27%-32%

Australia 15%-17%

Low IQ is a significant risk factor for offending & re-offending

An important factor largely ignored until recently is Indigene

What is the prevalence of Intellectual Disability & criminal offending behaviours, and what are some of the caveats around these data?

Prevalance of ID among adult & juvenile correction centres

USA up to 19.1%

UK 27%-32%

Australia 15%-17%

Low IQ is a significant risk factor for offending & re-offending

An important factor largely ignored until recently is Indigene

What are some of the challenges faced by people with intellectually giftedness?

they develop asynchronously

may be labelled ID or ADD

can be intense

age 5-6: self-doubt, protective, highly anxious

by high school interpersonal skills decrease, isolation & anxiety increase

often Emotional intelligence will predict how well they do rather than IQ

Intervention IS necessary

Those treated with counselling/psychotherapy converted anxieties and conflicts into powerful visions, sense of destiny & charismatic personalities.

Those who did not resolve conflicts were largely underachievers and had self-destructive behaviours

What are some of the challenges faced by people with intellectually giftedness?

they develop asynchronously

may be labelled ID or ADD

can be intense

age 5-6: self-doubt, protective, highly anxious

by high school interpersonal skills decrease, isolation & anxiety increase

often Emotional intelligence will predict how well they do rather than IQ

Intervention IS necessary

Those treated with counselling/psychotherapy converted anxieties and conflicts into powerful visions, sense of destiny & charismatic personalities.

Those who did not resolve conflicts were largely underachievers and had self-destructive behaviours

What are Clare's key points from Lecture 6?

Individual differences exist in IQ that can lead to changes in IQ

IQ is relatively stable though SOME intellectual abilities decline with age

The Flynn-Effect causes IQ to increase over time - IQ is 're-set' when tests are 're-normed'

Gender differences exist for SPECIFIC intellectual abilities

ID criteria is extremely sensitive & has major implications

Indigenous populations are at-risk for low IQ and legal complications - consider the important legal implications & interventions

Intellectually gifted individuals are also a cause for concern & may require intervention