The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

68

Transcript of The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Page 1: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.
Page 2: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

The Brain

Page 3: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Theories of Intelligence

Page 4: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Statistics

Page 5: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Research Methods

Page 6: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Perception

Page 7: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Sleep

Page 8: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

Brain Parts Theories of Intelligence

Statistics Research Methods

Perception Sleep

Page 9: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

“Executive control center”; judgment, planning, reasoning

Page 10: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Frontal Lobe

Page 11: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Contains the auditory cortex

Page 12: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Temporal Lobe

Page 13: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Controls the muscles needed for speech; Expressive language

Page 14: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Broca’s Area

Page 15: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Lobe that controls voluntary movements

Page 16: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Motor cortex (in back of frontal lobe!)

Page 17: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Parts of the limbic system

Page 18: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Hypothalamus: hunger, thirst, body temperature

Amygdala: fear and aggression, threat detection center

Hippocampus: new memories (explicit)

Page 19: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Famous for his theory on multiple intelligence; Identified at least 8

Page 20: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Howard Gardner

Page 21: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Intelligence proposed by Charles Spearman; A common level of intelligence that underlies all of our intelligence behavior

Page 22: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

General (g) intelligence

Page 23: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

What is emotional intelligence?

Page 24: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

The ability to perceive, understand, manage, and use emotions

Page 25: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Proposed a triarchic theory of intelligence

Page 26: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Robert Sternberg; Analytical, creative, and practical intelligences

Page 27: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

List Gardner’s intelligence types

Page 28: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Linguistic, logical-mathematical, musical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, intrapersonal, interpersonal, naturalist

Page 29: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

The three measures of central tendency

Page 30: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Mean, median, and mode

Page 31: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

What is the range of the following score distribution:5, 10, 20, 30

Page 32: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

25

Page 33: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

In a normal curve, where are the mean, median, and mode located?

Page 34: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

In the middle! For IQ, would be 100

Page 35: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

A measure of how tightly clustered a group of scores is around their mean; Square root of variance

Page 36: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Standard Deviation

Page 37: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

What is a z score?

Page 38: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Used to compare scores from different distributions; Converts scores into distance standard deviation “points”

Page 39: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Type of research in which humans or animals are studied in their natural context

Page 40: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Naturalistic observation

Page 41: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Studies one individual in depth through tests, interviews, observations

Page 42: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Case Study

Page 43: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

In using surveys, a representative sample is one that is…

Page 44: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Representative of your entire population

Page 45: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Name that type of research. Comparing hours slept per night and GPA

Page 46: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Correlational

Page 47: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

What is the difference between a longitudinal study and a cross sectional study?

Page 48: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Longitudinal: same group over time

Cross sectional: studying same thing in different age groups

Page 49: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Group of psychologists who stressed that the whole is different than the sum of its parts; Studied organizational principles

Page 50: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Gestalt

Page 51: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

The understanding that an object’s shape remains the same even though the angle of view makes the shape appear changed

Page 52: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Size constancy

Page 53: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

What is relative size?

Page 54: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Smaller objects are further away, larger objects are clower

Page 55: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Appearance of motion created by lights turning off and on in a sequence

Page 56: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Phi Phenomenon

Page 57: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Name and explain your two binocular depth cues

Page 58: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Convergence: tension in eyes increase as objects come closer

Retinal disparity: slightly different image projected onto the retina due to the separation of your eyes

Page 59: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Machine used to measure sleep waves

Page 60: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

EEG

Page 61: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Body rhythm that occur on a 24 hour cycle

Page 62: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Circadian rhythms

Page 63: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

What are sleep spindles?

Page 64: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Bursts of activity that occur during Stage 2

Page 65: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Cluster of neurons in the hypothalamus that receive information from the retina about light

Page 66: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Suprachiasmatic Nucleus

Page 67: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Chemicals involved in sleep

Page 68: The Brain Theories of Intelligence Statistics.

Adenosine: triggers sleepinessMelatonin: High levels help us get ready for sleep