2002 prentice hall thinking and intelligence chapter 9
Post on 19-Jan-2018
217 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
©2002 Prentice Hall
Thinking and Intelligence
Chapter 9
©2002 Prentice Hall
Thinking and Intelligence Thought: Using what we know Reasoning rationally Barriers to reasoning rationally Measuring intelligence: The psychometric
approach Dissecting intelligence: The cognitive approach Animal minds
©2002 Prentice Hall
Thought: Using What We Know The elements of cognition. How conscious is thought?
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Elements of Cognition Concept
Mental category that groups objects, relations, activities, abstractions, or qualities having common properties.
A basic concept has a moderate number of instances and is easier to acquire.
A prototype is an especially representative example of a concept.
Proposition A unit of meaning that is made up of
concepts and expresses a single idea.
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Elements of Cognition Cognitive Schema
An integrated mental network of knowledge, beliefs, and expectations concerning a particular topic or aspect of the world.
Mental Image A mental representation that mirrors or resembles the thing
it represents.
©2002 Prentice Hall
How Conscious is Thought? Subconscious Processes
Mental processes occurring outside of conscious awareness but accessible to consciousness when necessary.
Nonconscious Processes Mental processes occurring outside of and not available
to conscious awareness. Implicit learning occurs when you have:
acquired knowledge about something without being aware of how you did so, and without being able to state exactly what you have learned.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Reasoning Rationally Formal reasoning: Algorithms and logic. Informal reasoning: Heuristics and dialectical
thinking. Reflective judgment.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Formal Reasoning: Algorithms and Logic Deductive Reasoning
A tool of formal logic in which a conclusion necessarily follows from a set of observations or propositions (premises).
Inductive Reasoning A tool of formal logic
in which a conclusion probably follows from a set of observations or propositions or premises, but could be false.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Informal Reasoning: Heuristics and Dialectical Thinking Heuristic
A rule of thumb that suggests a course of action or guides problem solving but does not guarantee an optimal solution.
Dialectical Reasoning A process in which opposing facts or
ideas are weighed and compared, with a view to determining the best solution or resolving differences.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Reflective Judgment Skills
The ability to question assumptions. Evaluate and integrate evidence. Relate that evidence to a theory or opinion. Consider alternative interpretations. Reach defendable conclusions. Be able to reassess those conclusions in face of new
information. Developmental stages include prereflective,
quasi-reflective, and reflective.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Barriers to Reasoning Rationally Exaggerating the improbable Avoiding loss Biases due to mental sets The confirmation bias The hindsight bias The need for cognitive consistency Overcoming our cognitive biases
©2002 Prentice Hall
Exaggerating the Improbable Availability Heuristic
The tendency to judge the probability of an event by how easy it is to think of examples or instances.
For example, in the wake of September 11, most people overestimated their odds of dying in a plane crash even though they continued to take higher risks by driving in their cars.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Avoiding Loss People try to minimize
risks and losses when making decisions.
Responses to the same choice will differ based on whether outcome is framed as gain or loss. In the example,
outcomes are the same in Problems 1 & 2
©2002 Prentice Hall
Biases Due to Mental Sets A tendency to solve problems using
procedures that worked before on similar problems.
Mental sets make learning and problem solving more efficient. For example, we look for patterns in events.
Not helpful when a problem calls for fresh insights or a new approach.
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Nine-Dot Problem Connect all 9 dots Use only 4 lines Do not lift your
pencil from the page after you begin drawing
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Hindsight Bias The tendency to overestimate one’s ability
to have predicted an event once the outcome is known. Also known as the “I knew it all along”
phenomenon. Common in political judgments, medical
judgments, military decisions.
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Confirmation Bias The tendency to look for or pay attention
only to information that confirms one’s own beliefs.
Test this rule: If a card has a vowel on one side, it has an even number on the other side.Which 2 cards to turn over?
©2002 Prentice Hall
Need for Cognitive Consistency Cognitive Dissonance:
A state of tension that occurs when a person simultaneously holds two cognitions that are psychologically inconsistent, or
when a person’s belief is inconsistent with his or her behavior.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Conditions which may reduce dissonance.
When you need to justify a choice or decision you freely made.
When you need to justify behavior that conflicts with your view of yourself.
When you need to justify the effort put into a decision or choice.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Justification of Effort The tendency of individuals to
increase their liking for something they have worked hard for or suffered to attain.
A common form of dissonance reduction.
After listening to a boring group discussion, those who went through sever initiation to join, rated it most highly. (Aronson & Mills, 1959)
©2002 Prentice Hall
Measuring Intelligence: The Psychometric Approach
Defining intelligence. The invention of IQ tests. Can IQ tests be culture-free.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Defining Intelligence Intelligence
An inferred characteristic of an individual, usually defined as the ability to profit from experience, acquire knowledge, think abstractly, act purposefully, or adapt to changes in the environment.
g factor A general intellectual ability assumed by many theorists
to underlie specific mental abilities and talents. Psychometrics
The measurement of mental abilities, traits and processes.
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Invention of IQ tests Binet believed we should measure a child’s mental
age. Binet and Simon developed a test which measured
memory, vocabulary, and perceptual discrimination.
Mental age was divided by chronological age and multiplied by 100 to get a IQ or intelligent quotient score.
Now IQ scores are derived from norms provided for standardized intelligence tests.
©2002 Prentice Hall
The Psychometric Approach IQ scores are distributed
“normally” Bell-shaped curve
Very high and low scores are rare
68% of people have IQ between 85-115 99.7% between 55-145
©2002 Prentice Hall
Can IQ Tests be Culture Free? Attempts to make IQ tests culture fair and culture
free have backfired because different cultures have different problem-solving strategies.
Cultural values and experiences affect a person’s: Attitude toward exams, Comfort in the settings required for testing, Motivation Rapport with test provider, Competitiveness, and Ease of independent problem solving.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Expectations, Stereotypes and IQ Scores Scores are affected by expectations for
performance. These expectations are shaped by cultural
stereotypes. Stereotype threat
A burden of doubt one feels about his or her performance due to negative stereotypes about his or her group’s abilities.
Research has shown effects of stereotype threat on African-Americans, Latinos, low-income people, women, and elderly people.
©2002 Prentice Hall
An Illustration of Stereotype Threat
©2002 Prentice Hall
Dissecting Intelligence: The Cognitive Approach
The triarchic theory. Domains of intelligence. Motivation and intelligence.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Sternberg's Triarchic Theory Componential - a.k.a. “Analytic”
Comparing, analyzing, and evaluating. This type of processes correlates best with IQ.
Experiential - a.k.a. “Creative” Inventing or designing solutions to new problems. Transfer skills to new situations.
Contextual - a.k.a. “Practical” Using (i.e., applying) the things you know in
everyday contexts.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Domains of Intelligence
Emotional intelligence The ability to:
identify your own and other people’s emotions accurately,
express your emotions clearly, and regulate emotions in yourself and others.
Appears to be biologically based (Damasio, 1994).
©2002 Prentice Hall
Motivation and intelligence Comparing the 100 most successful men
with 100 least successful, researchers found that motivation, not IQ made the difference.
Motivation to work hard at intellectual tasks differs as a function of culture.
American children are as knowledgeable as Asian children on general skills.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Beliefs about intelligence Asian parents, teachers, and students are more
likely to belief that math ability comes from studying.
Americans more likely to view ability as innate. American parents had lower academic standards
for kids. American children did not value education as
much.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Animal Minds Animal intelligence. Animals and language. Thinking About the Thinking of Animals
©2002 Prentice Hall
Animal Intelligence Cognitive Ethology
The study of cognitive processes in nonhuman animals.
Studies in cognitive ethology have shown evidence that some animals can Anticipate future events. Use numbers to label quantities. Coordinate activities with other animals.
©2002 Prentice Hall
Animals and Language Language is a critical element of human
cognition. Many animal species can be taught to
communicate in ways that resemble language. Chimpanzees and bonobos converse using American
Sign Language and symbol board systems An African grey parrot has been taught to count,
classify, and compare objects using English words Whether these behaviors are language depends
on how you define “language.”
©2002 Prentice Hall
Thinking About Animal Thinking Anthropomorphism
The tendency to falsely attribute human qualities to nonhuman beings.
Anthropocentrism The tendency to think, mistakenly, that
human beings have nothing in common with other animals.
top related