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Title: Language


1
Language
2
Language
  • From cooing to communication
  • In first months, babies are responsive to pitch ,
    intensity and sound of language people talk to
    babies w/ more varied pitch and intonation

CLICK PHOTO TO HEAR MOTHERESE
3
Language
  • By 4-6 months, babies have learned basic sounds
    of their language, and over time lose ability to
    perceive speech sounds in another language
  • Between 6 months to 1 year, babies enter the
    babbling phase infants become more familiar with
    the sound structure of their native language

4
  • Starting around 11 months, babies develop
    repertoire of symbolic gestures gestures spur
    language learning
  • Between 18 months and 2 years, 2 and 3 word
    combinations are produced 1st combinations have
    a telegraphic quality

5
  • Noam Chomsky Is Language Innate?
  • Chomsky observed that children can figure out a
    sentences deep structure from the surface
    structure, therefore the brain must contain a
    language acquisition device that enables children
    to develop a language if they are exposed to it.

6
  • Language (Chomsky Innate?)
  • Children all over the world go through similar
    stages of linguistics development
  • Children combine words in ways that adults never
    would, so they could not be simply imitating
    adults

7
Intelligence
8
What is Intelligence?
  • Intelligence mental quality consisting of the
    ability to learn from experience, solve problems,
    and use knowledge to adapt to new situations

9
g
  • After finding that schoolchildren's grades across
    seemingly unrelated subjects were positively
    correlated, Charles Spearman proposed that these
    correlations reflected the influence of a
    dominant factor, which he termed g for "general"
    intelligence

10
What is Intelligence?
  • Is a talented artist who cant do math
    unintelligent?
  • Is a brilliant scientist who cant follow a road
    map unintelligent?

11
  • Different cultures deem intelligent as whatever
    attributes enable success in those cultures
  • Different cultures deem intelligent as whatever
    attributes enable success in those cultures
  • Is intelligence one general ability, or several
    specific abilities?

12
Theory of Multiple Intelligences
  • Howard Gardner
  • Linguistic
  • Logical-Mathematical
  • Body-Kinesthetic
  • Spatial
  • Musical
  • Interpersonal
  • Intrapersonal
  • Naturalist
  • Existential

13
Linguistic words and language
  • A person's ability to construct and comprehend
    language
  • Journalists, poets, novelists, storyteller

14
Logical-Mathematical numbers and logic
  • ability to mentally process logical problems and
    equations, the type most often found on multiple
    choice standardized tests
  • Scientists, accountants, navigator, surveyor

15
Spatial pictures
  • Our ability to comprehend shapes and images in
    three dimensions.
  • perceive and interpret that which we may or may
    not physically see (assemble puzzle, mold a
    sculpture, etc)
  • Artists, cab drivers, architects, chess player

16
Musical music
  • The ability to perform and compose music
  • Pianist, Composers, singers

17
Intrapersonal self-awareness and reflection
  • allows us to tap into our being - who we are,
    what feelings we have, and why we are this way.
  • Self-help and motivational speakers,
    philosophers, therapists

18
Body-Kinesthetic - physical
  • Each person possesses a certain control of his or
    her movements, balance, agility and grace.
  • Athletes, dancers, craftsperson

19
Interpersonal social skills
  • ability to interact with others, understand them,
    and interpret their behavior
  • Politicians, clergy, salesperson, teacher

20
Naturalistic experience in the natural world
  • People who are sensitive to changes in weather
    patterns, love the outdoors or are adept at
    distinguishing nuances between large numbers of
    similar objects may be expressing naturalist
    intelligence abilities.
  • Rangers, Guides, Environmentalists, Zoologist

21
Existential Intelligence
  • Individuals who exhibit the proclivity to pose
    (and ponder)

questions about life death, and
ultimate realities
  • Philosophers and Thinkers - Aristotle, Confucius,
    Einstein, Plato, Socrates

22
Triarchic Theory of Multiple Intelligences
  • Robert Sternberg
  • -Analytical
  • -Creative
  • -Practical

23
Analytical
  • Assessed by intelligence tests, which present
    well-defined problems having single right
    answers academic intelligence. Problem-solving
    strategies and their correct applications to
    real-life issues. Commonly referred to as book
    smarts.

24
Creative Intelligence
  • the ability to effectively deal with novel
    situations by

drawing on existing skills and knowledge.
25
Practical Intelligence
  • the ability to adapt to the environment,
    reflecting was is commonly called street smarts.

26
Cluster Intelligence
  • Louis Thurstone
  • There are seven different primary mental
    abilities.
  • The scores for each of the seven tests of
    intelligence is read separately in order to get a
    better understanding of strengths and weaknesses

27
Verbal comprehension (or Verbal Ability)
  • Found in such things as verbal reasoning,
    reasoning by analogy, and reading comprehension.
    It is "characterized primarily by its reference
    to ideas and the meanings of words."

28
Word fluency
  • Facility with words in special contexts, such as
    anagrams, rhyming, etc.

29
Number ability
  • Arithmetic computation

30
Spatial ability
  • The ability to mentally manipulate and visualize
    geometric relations facility in spatial and
    visual imagery.

31
Associative memory
  • The ability to make random paired associations
    that require rote memory memorizing skills.

32
Perceptual speed
  • Facility in finding or in recognizing particular
    items in a perceptual field.

33
General reasoning ability (or Induction)
  • Facility in finding rules or principles in test
    items, such as in a number series.

34
Emotional Intelligence
  • Salovey and Mayer
  • Gardners Multiple Intelligences PLUS
  • Emotional Intelligence superb social skills,
    manages conflicts well, and has great empathy for
    others

35
Intelligence Anomalies
  • Savant Syndrome a condition in which a person
    otherwise limited in mental ability has an
    exceptional specific skill, such as in
    computation or drawing some people are
    functionally retarded in almost every aspect
    except for one very specific ability.

36
Creative Intelligence Aha!
  • Andrew Wiles
  • Creativity is the ability to produce ideas that
    are both novel and valuable
  • There are five components of a creatively
    intelligent person
  • Expertise
  • Imaginative Thinking Skills
  • A Venturesome Personality
  • Intrinsic Motivation
  • A Creative Environment

37
  • Expertise is a well-developed base of knowledge
  • Imaginative Thinking Skills provide the ability
    to see new things, to recognize patterns, and to
    make connections

38
  • A Venturesome Personality tolerates ambiguity and
    risk, perseveres in overcoming obstacles, and
    seeks new experiences apart from the group
  • Intrinsic Motivation is the personal pleasure
    derived from the challenge of the work

39
  • A Creative Environment sparks, supports, and
    refines creative ideas.

40
Intelligence and the Brain
  • Correlational studies have suggested that brain
    size and intelligence are positively correlated
  • Brain analyses have suggested that more
    intelligent people have more neural connections

41
Intelligence and the Brain
  • Studies suggest that more intelligent people have
    faster perceptional skills and brain reaction
    speeds

42
Assessing Intelligence
  • How is intelligence determined?
  • Testing

43
Two Types of Intelligence Tests
  • Aptitude Test a test designed to predict a
    persons future performance aptitude is the
    capacity to learn
  • Achievement Test a test designed to assess what
    a person has already learned

44
One Example of an Achievement Test is an IQ Test
  • Intelligence Test a written method for
    assessing an individuals mental aptitudes and
    comparing them with those of others, using
    numerical scores
  • Student A got a 1300 SAT score, while Student B
    got a 900 SAT score. Student A is more
    intelligent.

45
IQ Tests
  • Stanford-Binet the most widely used written
    intelligence test
  • Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) the
    most widely used intelligence test contains
    verbal and performance (nonverbal) subtests

46
Factor Analysis
  • a statistical procedure that identifies
    clusters of related items (factors) on a test
    used to identify different dimensions of
    performance that underlie ones total score
  • Along with your score on a test, there is a
    breakdown of your performances on individual
    sections of the test 600 Verbal, 700 Math on a
    total SAT score of 1300

47
Alfred Binet
  • The 1st widely utilized intelligence Test
  • 1904
  • Developed a test to identify French school
    children in need of alternative education

48
The Stanford-Binet IQ Test
  • 1916 Louis Terman, Stanford University
  • Felt that IQ was inherited and that tests would
    be a great way to classify children
  • Adjusted the test for English speaking students
    and utilized a colleagues formula to derive a
    persons IQ or Intelligence Quotient

49
How do you determine IQ?Step 1
  • Mental Age a measure of intelligence test
    performance devised by Binet the chronological
    age that most typically corresponds to a given
    level of performance.
  • A child who does as well as the average
    8-year-old is said to have a mental age of 8.

50
How do you determine IQ?Step 2
  • Intelligence Quotient (IQ) defined originally
    as the ratio of mental age (ma) to the
    chronological age (ca), multiplied by 100. (MA /
    CA) X 100
  • An 8-year old student that takes an IQ Test
    scores as well the average 10-year old.
  • 10/8 1.25 X 100 125 IQ

51
IQ Scale
  • Over 140 - Genius or near genius
  • 120 - 140 - Very superior intelligence
  • 110 - 119 - Superior intelligence
  • 90 - 109 - Normal or average intelligence
  • 80 - 89 - Dullness
  • 70 - 79 - Borderline deficiency
  • Under 70 - Definite feeble-mindedness

52
  • Normal Curve the symmetrical bell-shaped curve
    that describes the distribution of many physical
    and psychological attributes. Most scores fall
    near the average, and fewer and fewer scores lie
    near the extremes

53
  • The normal curve for IQ ranges from 85-100,
    plus or minus 15. About 95 of all scores fall
    into the range of 70-130. About .01 score below
    55 or higher than 145.

54
  • Mental Retardation a condition of limited
    mental ability, indicated by an intelligence
    score below 70 and difficultly in adapting to the
    demands of life from mild, to profound

55
Constructing An Intelligence Test
56
1. Establish A Standard
  • Standardization defining meaningful scores by
    comparison with the performance of a pretested
    standardization group
  • The control test group (a representative
    sample of the entire population you are comparing
    scores to) scored an average of 1000 on the SAT.
    You scored a 1200 on the SAT. You are above
    the standard.

57
2. Is The Test Reliable?
  • Reliability the extent to which a test yields
    consistent results, and how well it can be
    replicated

58
2. Checking Reliability
  • Split-Half Reliability Half of the students
    answer all of the odd questions, the other half
    answer all of the even questions on a test. The
    scores should be similar if the test is
    consistently testing the same knowledge.
  • Equivalent Form Students who receive Form A of
    a test should score similarly to those students
    who received Form B regarding the same
    information.

59
3. Is The Test Valid?
  • Validity the extent to which a test measures or
    predicts what it is supposed to

60
3. Checking Validity
  • Content Validity the extent to which a test
    samples the behavior that is of interest
  • If a test is supposed to test your knowledge of
    mathematical principles, the questions should be
    on math, not history or writing skills

61
3. Checking Validity
  • Predictive Validity the success with which a
    test predicts the behavior it is designed to
    predict it is assessed by computing the
    correlation between test scores and the criterion
    behavior
  • Is a test is designed to measure mechanical
    aptitude, people who receive high scores should
    ultimately prove more successful in mechanical
    jobs than people that scored low

62
Reliability and Validity
  • It is possible to have a test that is reliable,
    but not valid. Such a test consistently
    measures something, but not what it is intended
    to measure.
  • IE. A vocabulary test given in math class is
    reliable as far as testing vocabulary, but is not
    a valid measure of a students mathematical
    intelligence.

63
Reliability and Validity
  • It is impossible to have a test that is valid,
    but not reliable. If individual scores fluctuate
    wildly, then they cannot consistently correlate
    with other scores, whatever those scores may be.
  • Tests cannot be accurately measuring a given set
    of material if scores on those tests vary wildly.
    On multiple tests of a single mathematical
    principal you score an 89, 34, 56, and a 99, the
    tests cannot have been consistently testing the
    same material, nor can they be good indicators
    that you know or dont know the material.

64
What kinds of things may affect IQ?
  • Gender?
  • Race?
  • Wealth?
  • Genetics/Heritability?
  • Health Issues?

65
Genetic Influences
  • The intelligence scores of identical twins,
    raised together, are as similar as the scores of
    a single person taking the test twice
  • Twins raised separately have scores that are
    roughly 70 similar

66
Genetic Influences
  • A gene on chromosome 6 has been identified as
    potentially being the IQ gene. It has been
    found in 1/3 of children with very high
    intelligence scores.
  • By inserting an extra gene related to memory into
    fertilized mouse eggs, researchers have produced
    smarter mice

67
Genetic Influences
  • We cannot say what percentage of an individuals
    intelligence is inherited (heritability), but we
    can say that differences amongst people can be
    attributed to their genetic makeup.

68
Environmental Influences
  • J. McVicker Hunts studies concluded that severe
    disadvantages, such as malnutrition, sensory
    deprivation, and social isolation reduce
    intellectual abilities
  • Head-Start type programs may help children
    prepare better for school, but not necessarily
    increase intelligence

69
School Effects
  • Those with high intelligence do better in school,
    go to school longer, and earn higher incomes

70
Ethnic Similarities and Differences
  • Racial groups differ in their average scores on
    intelligence tests, but differences within racial
    groups are greater.
  • High scoring people and groups are more likely to
    attain high levels of education and income.

71
Gender Similarities and Differences
  • Girls are
  • More verbally fluent
  • Better spellers
  • More sensitive to touch, taste, and odor
  • More capable of remembering words and the
    locations of objects
  • Higher scoring in math computation tests
  • Better at detecting emotions
  • Higher scoring on tests of recognition

72
Gender Similarities and Differences
  • Boys
  • Outnumber girls in special education classes
  • Talk later
  • Read later
  • Score higher on math problem solving tests
  • Score higher on tests of spatial ability
  • Score higher on tests related to the sciences
  • Are less emotionally sensitive

73
The Question of Bias
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