A. General intelligence represents an average of the processing of several independent components that contribute to the performance of any complex task.
B. There is a single ability common to all tasks and the differences in this single ability between individuals give rise to differences in general intelligence.
C. There is no such thing as general intelligence
D. All of the above
Intelligence
Intelligence
A. Shared environments
B. Non-shared environments
C. Shared and non-shared environments
D. Genetic traits
A. Genotypic
B. Environmental
C. Modular
D. Phenotypic
A. Sternberg’s triarchic theory
B. Fluid intelligence
C. Minimal cognitive archittecture
D. Information-processing
A. Low general intelligence
B. Slow on-line processing
C. A known organic etiology
D. IQ below 70
E. All of the above
A. decreased; restandardized
B. decreased; factor analyzed
C. increased; factor analyzed
D. increased; restandardized
A. reliable; valid
B. reliable; normal
C. valid; reliable
D. standardized; valid
A. standardization.
B. reification.
C. heritability.
D. convergent thinking.
A. demonstrating a high level of emotionol intelligence.
B. gifted with a superior level of Sperman’s g factor.
C. someone with savant syndrome
D. above average is her capacity for divergent thinking.
A. negative; negatively
B. positively; not
C. positively; negatively
D. positively; positively