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Title: Chapter 8 Language, Thinking, and Intelligence Language


1
Chapter 8Language, Thinking, and Intelligence
2
Language
  • Communication the sending and receiving of
    information
  • Language the primary mode of communication among
    humans
  • A systematic way of communicating information
    using symbols and rules for combining them
  • Speech oral expression of language
  • Approximately 5,000 spoken languages exist today.

3
Language the Brain
  • Brocas area small clump of neurons near front
    of brain
  • Influences brain areas that control the muscles
    of the lips, jaw, tongue, soft palate, and vocal
    cords during speech thus, Broca's area is
    important in language production.
  • May also be involved when using grammatical
    language rules in both producing and
    comprehending sentences.
  • Wernickes area connected by nerve bundle to
    Brocas area
  • Important for language comprehension

4
Brocas Wernickes Areas
5
Do Animals Use Language?
  • Since 1930s, numerous attempts have been made to
    teach language to a few select species.
  • The most appropriate conclusion to draw
  • Nonhuman species show no capacity to produce
    language on their own, but
  • Certain species can be taught to produce
    languagelike communication.

6
Infants Born Prepared to Learn Language
  • Language acquisition learning vs. inborn
    capacities
  • Behaviorisms language theory
  • People speak as they do because they have been
    reinforced for doing so.
  • Behaviorists assumed children were relatively
    passive.
  • The problem with this theory is that it does not
    fit the evidence.
  • Operant conditioning principles do not play the
    primary role in language development.

7
Infants Born Prepared to Learn Language
  • The nativist perspective
  • Language development proceeds according to an
    inborn program.
  • Language Acquisition Device (Noam Chomsky)
    humans are born with specialized brain structures
    (Language Acquisition Device) that facilitates
    the learning of language.
  • Interactionist perspectives
  • Propose environmental and biological factors
    interact together to affect the course of
    language development.
  • Social interactionist perspective strongly
    influenced by Lev Vygotskys writings

8
Infants Born Prepared to Learn Language
  • Assessing the three perspectives on language
    acquisition
  • General consensus
  • Behaviorists place too much emphasis on
    conditioning principles.
  • Nativists dont give enough credit to
    environmental influences.
  • Interactionist approaches may offer best possible
    solution.

9
Stages of Language Development
  • All human languages are composed of
  • Phonemes smallest sound units in speech
  • Morphemes smallest units that carry meaning

10
Stages of Language Development
  • Language development begins with children using
    primitive-sounding phonemes.
  • One-word stageuse only one-word phrases.
  • Consequently, they overextend their
    wordsapplication of the process of assimilation.
  • By the age of 2two-word stagebegin using two
    separate words in the same sentence.
  • A phase of telegraphic speech begins.
  • Child-directed speechmotherese
  • Parents help infants recognize specific language
    forms and skills necessary for future language
    learning by the way they talk to them (slowly,
    high pitch, simple words, heightened expression).

11
Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development - Four
Stages
  • Jean Piaget contended that cognitive development
    occurs as children organize their structures of
    knowledge to adapt to their environment.
  • A schema is an organized cluster of knowledge
    that people use to understand and interpret
    information.

12
Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development - Four
Stages
  • Acquisition of knowledge occurs through the
    complementary processes of assimilation and
    accommodation.
  • Assimilation the process of absorbing new
    information into existing schemas
  • Accommodation the process of changing existing
    schemas to absorb new information

13
Piagets Stages
  • Sensorimotor stage (birth2 years)
  • experience the world through actions (grasping,
    looking, touching, and sucking)
  • One of the major accomplishments at this stage is
    the development of object permanence.
  • Preoperational stage (26 years)
  • represent things with words and images but
    having no logical reasoning

14
Piagets Stages
  • Concrete operational stage (711 years)
  • think logically about concrete events
    understanding concrete analogies and performing
    arithmetic operations
  • Formal operational stage (12 yearsadulthood)
  • develop abstract reasoning

15
The Three-Mountains Problem
16
Conservation
17
Conservation of Mass
18
Conservation of Number
19
Piagets Conclusions Have Been Questioned
  • Development may be less stagelike than he
    proposed.
  • Children may achieve capabilities earlier than he
    thought.
  • All adults may not reach formal operational
    thought.

20
Evaluating Piaget
  • Despite criticisms, most developmental
    psychologists agree that Piaget has generally
    outlined
  • An accurate view of many of the significant
    changes that occur in mental functioning with
    increasing childhood maturation and
  • That children are not passive creatures merely
    being molded by environmental forces, but that
    they are actively involved in their own cognitive
    growth.

21
The Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis
  • Does language determine thought?
  • Benjamin Lee Whorfs linguistic relativity
    hypothesis
  • Proposed that the structure of language
    determines the structure of thought (without a
    word to describe an experience, you cannot think
    about it).
  • However, research indicates that just because a
    language lacks terms for stimuli does not mean
    that language users cannot perceive features of
    the stimuli.
  • The answer is no. Most psychologists believe in
    a weaker version of Whorfs hypothesisthat
    language can influence thinking.

22
Thinking
  • Thinkingcognition
  • The mental activity of knowing
  • The processes through which knowledge is acquired
  • The processes through which problems are solved

23
Concept Formation
  • Concept a mental grouping of objects, ideas, or
    events that share common properties
  • Concepts enable people to store memories in an
    organized fashion.
  • Categorization is the process of forming
    concepts.
  • We form some concepts by identifying defining
    features.
  • Problem with forming concepts by definition is
    that many familiar concepts have uncertain or
    fuzzy boundaries.

24
Concept Formation
  • Thus, categorizing has less to do with features
    that define all members of a concept and has more
    to do with features that characterize the typical
    member of a concept.
  • The most representative members of a concept are
    known as prototypes.

25
When Is It a Cup, and When Is It a Bowl?
26
Fuzzy Boundaries
  • Determine whether something belongs to a group by
    comparing it with the prototype.
  • Objects accepted and rejected define the
    boundaries of the group or concept.
  • This is different for different people.

27
Problem-Solving Strategies
  • Common problem-solving strategies
  • Trial and error trying one possible solution
    after another until one works
  • Algorithm following a specific rule or
    step-by-step procedure that inevitably produces
    the correct solution
  • Heuristic following a general rule of thumb to
    reduce the number of possible solutions
  • Insight sudden realization of how a problem can
    be solved

28
Internal Obstacles Can Impede Problem Solving
  • Confirmation bias the tendency to seek
    information that supports our beliefs, while
    ignoring disconfirming information
  • Mental set the tendency to continue using
    solutions that have worked in the past, even
    though a better alternative may exist
  • Functional fixedness the tendency to think of
    objects as functioning in fixed and unchanging
    ways and ignoring other less obvious ways in
    which they might be used

29
The Candle Problem
30
Decision-Making Heuristics
  • Representativeness heuristic
  • the tendency to make decisions based on how
    closely an alternative matches (or represents) a
    particular prototype
  • Availability heuristic
  • the tendency to judge the frequency or
    probability of an event in terms of how easy it
    is to think of examples of that event

31
Decision-Making Heuristics
  • Five conditions most likely to lead to heuristic
    use
  • People dont have time to engage in systematic
    analysis.
  • People are overloaded with information.
  • People consider issues to be not very important.
  • People have little information to use in making a
    decision.
  • Something about the situation primes a given
    heuristic.

32
Intelligence
  • Intelligence consists of the mental abilities
    necessary to adapt to and shape the environment.
  • Intelligence involves not only reacting to ones
    surroundings but also actively forming them.

33
Early IQ Testing Shaped by Racial/Cultural
Stereotypes
  • British Sir Francis Galton founded the eugenics
    movement to improve the hereditary
    characteristics of society.
  • Eugenics proposed that
  • White and upper-middle-class individualswho were
    assumed to have high mental abilityshould marry
    and have children.
  • Lower-class Whites and members of other races
    who were assumed to have low mental
    abilityshould not reproduce.

34
Early IQ Testing Shaped by Racial/Cultural
Stereotypes
  • Unlike Galton, French psychologist Alfred Binet
  • Made no assumptions about why intelligence
    differences exist.
  • Believed intellectual ability could be
    increased through education.
  • Over Binets objections, American Henry Goddard
    used Binets intelligence test to identify the
    feebleminded so they could be segregated and
    prevented from having children.

35
Aptitude Achievement Tests
  • Two categories of mental abilities measures
  • Aptitude tests measure capacity to learn new
    skill
  • Achievement tests measure what is already
    learned
  • Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) measures
    learned verbal and mathematical skills
  • SAT scores influenced by quality of test takers
    schools
  • Difference in intent/use of the test

36
Aptitude Achievement Tests
  • Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test the widely used
    American revision of the original French
    intelligence test.
  • Intelligence quotient (IQ) originally, the ratio
    of mental age to chronological age multiplied by
    100 (MA/CA ? 100).
  • Today, IQ is calculated by comparing how a
    persons performance deviates from the average
    score of her or his same-age peers, which is 100.
  • Wechsler Intelligence Scales the most widely
    used set of intelligence tests, containing both
    verbal and performance (nonverbal) subscales

37
Test Standardization
  • Process of establishing uniform procedures for
    administering a test and interpreting its scores
  • Reliability the degree to which it yields
    consistent results
  • Validity the degree to which a test measures
    what it is designed to measure
  • Content validity
  • Predictive validity degree to which test results
    predict other behaviors or measures

38
The Normal Distribution
39
Are intelligence tests culturally biased?
  • Critics claim that Whites and higher SES
    individuals have had greater exposure than ethnic
    minority and lower-class individuals to topics on
    most commonly used IQ tests.
  • Supporters of IQ tests respond that although IQ
    tests do not provide an unbiased measure of
    cognitive abilities, they do provide a fairly
    accurate measure of academic and occupational
    success.

40
What is Intelligence? One or Several Distinct
Abilities?
  • One of the primary questions about the nature of
    intelligence is whether it is best conceptualized
    as
  • A general, unifying capacity or
  • Many separate and relatively independent
    abilities.

41
What is Intelligence? One or Several Distinct
Abilities?
  • British psychologist Charles Spearman concluded
    there was a general intelligence, or g, factor
    underlying all mental abilities.
  • Louis Thurstone argued there were seven primary
    mental abilities
  • Reasoning, verbal fluency, verbal comprehension,
    perceptual speed, spatial skills, numerical
    computation, and memory

42
What is Intelligence? One or Several Distinct
Abilities?
  • Howard Gardners theory of multiple intelligences
    contends that intelligence consists of at least
    eight independent intelligences
  • Linguistic, logical-mathematical, spatial,
    musical, bodily-kinesthetic, naturalist,
    interpersonal, and intrapersonal

43
What is Intelligence? One or Several Distinct
Abilities?
  • Robert Sternbergs triarchic theory of
    intelligence proposes that intelligence consists
    of analytical, creative, and practical abilities.
  • Research still supports both perspectives
  • There is evidence that we have distinct mental
    abilities and a general intelligence factor.

44
Sternbergs Triarchic Theory of Intelligence
45
People Differ in Their Neural Complexity
Quickness
  • Brain size has a moderately high correlation (r
    .44) with IQ scores.
  • Some neuroscientists point to the fact that
    larger brains have more neurons than do smaller
    brains.
  • Another possibility brain size-IQ correlation is
    related to different levels of myelin in the
    brain.

46
People Differ in Their Neural Complexity
Quickness
  • Intelligence is partly based on neural
    complexity, quickness, and efficiency.
  • Additional studies suggest that smarter brains
    become more efficient with practice.
  • These findings suggest that intelligence is a
    product of both our biology (nature) and our
    experience (nurture).

47
People Differ in Their Neural Complexity
Quickness
  • Extremes of intelligence
  • Diagnosis of mental retardation given to people
    who
  • Have an IQ score below 70 and also have
    difficulty adapting to the routine demands of
    independent living.
  • Only 1-2 percent of the population meets both
    criteria.
  • Males outnumber females by 50 percent

48
People Differ in Their Neural Complexity
Quickness
  • Extremes of intelligence
  • About 75 percent of mental retardation cases
    thought to result from unfavorable social
    conditions or subtle and difficult-to-detect
    physiological effects
  • Remaining 25 percent of cases considered to have
    a specific organic cause, such as fetus or infant
    exposed to harmful substances
  • Down syndrome caused by an extra chromosome
    coming from either the mothers egg (the primary
    source) or the fathers sperm.

49
People Differ in Their Neural Complexity
Quickness
  • The gifted category used for IQs above 130 or 135
  • U.S. federal law designates that giftedness
    should be based on superior potential in any of
    six areas
  • General intelligence, specific aptitudes (for
    example, math and writing), performing arts,
    athletics, creativity, and leadership

50
Twin and Adoption Studies of Intelligence
  • Twin studies indicate that the average
    correlation of identical twins IQ scores is .86,
    while fraternal twins correlation is .60.
  • Fraternal twinswho are genetically no more
    similar than regular siblings, but who are
    exposed to more similar experiences due to their
    identical ageshave more similar IQ scores than
    other siblings.
  • In addition, nontwin siblings raised together
    have more similar IQs (r .47) than siblings
    raised apart (r .24).

51
The Nature-Nurture Debate
52
Twin and Adoption Studies of Intelligence
  • Adoption studies
  • Children who were adopted within 2 weeks to 1
    year of birth have higher IQ correlations with
    biological parents than with adoptive parents.
  • Based on twin and adoption studies
  • Heredity accounts for a little over 50 percent of
    the variation in intelligence, and
  • Environmental factors account for a little less
    than 50 percent.

53
Figure 8-12 Reaction Range
54
Gender Differences in IQ Scores
  • Gender differences male and female IQ scores are
    virtually identicalfew differences in certain
    aptitudes
  • Females tend to do better on verbal aptitude
    tests, while males tend to do better on
    visual-spatial tests.
  • Gender differences have also been found in
    mathematical ability.

55
Gender Differences in IQ Scores
  • Some studies suggest female-male differences in
    verbal and spatial abilities might be linked to
    differences in the organization of brain areas
    controlling verbal and spatial abilities and to
    hormonal fluctuations
  • Other studies suggest that these differences are
    a product of gender socialization and the
    different skills taught to girls and boys.

56
Group Differences in IQ Scores
  • African Americans score between 10 and 15 points
    lower than White Americans and Asian Americans.
  • Hispanic Americans achieve IQ scores somewhere in
    between those of Blacks and Whites.
  • Asian Americans score about 5 points higher than
    White Americans.

57
Group Differences in IQ Scores
  • These IQ test differences also occur on nonverbal
    test items that do not appear to be culturally
    biased against ethnic minorities.
  • Numerous studies suggest that it is highly
    unlikely that genetic differences between the
    races cause these group IQ differences.

58
Racial Differences in IQ Scores
Sources Data from N. J. Mackintosh. (1998). IQ
and human intelligence. Oxford Oxford University
Press. Neisser, U. (1998). The rising curve
Long-term gains in IQ and related measures.
Washington, DC American Psychological
Association.
59
Plant-Pot Analogy
60
Cultural Factors May Explain Group IQ Differences
  • Studies in various countries indicate that
    involuntary minorities achieve lower IQ scores
    than voluntary minorities.
  • Many social scientists believe that the primary
    causes are
  • Persisting negative cultural stereotypes within
    the dominant culture concerning involuntary
    minorities intellectual abilities
    (self-fulfilling prophecies), and
  • The self-protective defensive reaction many
    involuntary minority members subsequently develop
    against the rejecting mainstream culture
    (oppositional identities).

61
Cultural Factors May Explain Group IQ Differences
  • Stereotype threat disturbing awareness that your
    task performance might confirm that you
    personally fit the negative stereotype
  • According to Claude Steele, when highly motivated
    minority students take an IQ test worry that a
    low score will confirm a mentally inferior
    stereotype, the added pressure significantly
    hinders their performance.
  • Many studies inform us that negative stereotypes
    can create damaging self-fulfilling prophecies
    among members of many different social groups by
    inducing stereotype threat.

62
Performance and Stereotype Threat
63
Cultural Factors May Explain Group IQ Differences
  • Intellectual growth is nurtured when parents and
    the larger culture stress the
  • Value of education and
  • Importance of working hard to achieve
    intellectual mastery.
  • Intellectual growth is stunted when cultural
    beliefs impress upon the child that their
    academic success is either
  • Unlikely (due to negative cultural stereotypes)
    or
  • Not highly valued (due to it being incompatible
    with other cultural values).
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