Outline of human intelligence
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The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to human intelligence:
Human intelligence is, in the human species, the mental capacities to learn, understand, and reason, including the capacities to comprehend ideas, plan, solve problems, and use language to communicate.
Contents
- 1 Traits and aspects
- 2 Emergence and evolution
- 3 Augmented with technology
- 4 Capacities
- 5 Types of people, by intelligence
- 6 Models and theories
- 7 Related factors
- 8 Fields that study human intelligence
- 9 History
- 10 Organizations
- 11 Publications
- 12 Scholars and researchers
- 13 See also
- 14 Further reading
- 15 External links
Traits and aspects[edit]
In groups[edit]
In individuals[edit]
- Abstract thought
- Creativity
- Emotional intelligence
- Fluid and crystallized intelligence
- Knowledge
- Learning
- Malleability of intelligence
- Memory
- Moral intelligence
- Problem solving
- Reaction time
- Reasoning
- Risk intelligence
- Social intelligence
- Spatial intelligence
- Spiritual intelligence
- Understanding
- Verbal intelligence
- Visual processing
Emergence and evolution[edit]
Augmented with technology[edit]
Capacities[edit]
Outline of thought Cognition and mental processing
Types of people, by intelligence[edit]
High[edit]
Low[edit]
Models and theories[edit]
- Cattell–Horn–Carroll theory
- Fluid and crystallized intelligence
- General factor of intelligence
- Theory of multiple intelligences
- Triarchic theory of intelligence
- PASS theory of intelligence
- Parieto-frontal integration theory
- Vernon's verbal-perceptual model
- g-VPR model
Related factors[edit]
- Impact of health on intelligence
- Environment and intelligence
- Height and intelligence
- Nations and intelligence
- Neurological factors upon intelligence
- Race and intelligence
- Religiosity and intelligence
Fields that study human intelligence[edit]
- Cognitive epidemiology
- Evolution of human intelligence
- Heritability of IQ
- Mental chronometry
- Intelligence and public policy
- Behavioural genetics
- Human behavior genetics
Psychometrics: measurement[edit]
- Psychometrics
- Flynn effect
- Educational quotient
- g factor
- Heritability of IQ
- Intelligence quotient
- Ammons Quick Test
- Block design test
- Bracken School Readiness Assessment
- Cattell Culture Fair III
- Figure Reasoning Test
- History of the race and intelligence controversy
- Intelligence quotient
- Jensen box
- Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children
- Knox Cubes
- Kohs block design test
- Leiter International Performance Scale
- Lothian birth-cohort studies
- Miller Analogies Test
- NNAT
- Otis–Lennon School Ability Test
- Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test
- Porteus Maze Test
- Raven's Progressive Matrices
- Reynolds Intellectual Assessment Scales
- Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales
- Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale
- Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
- Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence
- Wonderlic Test
- Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Cognitive Abilities
- Standardized testing
History[edit]
Organizations[edit]
Publications[edit]
Scholars and researchers[edit]
- Anne Anastasi (1908–2001)
- Timothy Bates (1963– )
- Ruth Benedict (1887–1948)
- Alfred Binet (1857–1911)
- Thomas J. Bouchard, Jr. (1937– )
- Chris Brand (1943– )
- Carl Brigham (1890–1943)
- Nathan Brody
- Cyril Burt
- John Bissell Carroll
- James McKeen Cattell
- Raymond Cattell
- Stephen J. Ceci
- Catharine Cox Miles
- Ian Deary
- Andreas Demetriou
- Douglas K. Detterman
- Hans Eysenck
- James R. Flynn
- Francis Galton
- Howard Gardner
- Henry H. Goddard
- Robert A. Gordon
- Linda Gottfredson
- John Curtis Gowan
- Anthony Gregorc
- J. P. Guilford
- Richard J. Haier
- Richard Herrnstein
- Ronald K. Hoeflin
- Leta Stetter Hollingworth
- Lloyd Humphreys
- Earl B. Hunt
- Seymour Itzkoff
- Douglas N. Jackson
- Arthur Jensen
- Leon Kamin
- Alan S. Kaufman
- James C. Kaufman
- Nadeen L. Kaufman
- Scott Barry Kaufman
- Timothy Z. Keith
- John C. Loehlin
- David Lubinski
- Richard Lynn
- Nicholas Mackintosh
- Frank C. J. McGurk
- Ulric Neisser
- Helmuth Nyborg
- R. Travis Osborne
- John C. Raven
- Cecil R. Reynolds
- J. Philippe Rushton
- Sandra Scarr
- Théodore Simon
- Charles Spearman
- Herman H. Spitz
- William Stern (psychologist)
- Robert Sternberg
- Lewis Terman
- Lee A. Thompson
- Louis Leon Thurstone
- Ellis Paul Torrance
- Ledyard Tucker
- Philip A. Vernon
- David Wechsler
- Volkmar Weiss
- Lee Willerman
- Robert Yerkes
See also[edit]
Further reading[edit]
- Mackintosh, N. J. (2011). IQ and Human Intelligence (second ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-958559-5. Lay summary (9 February 2012). The second edition of a leading textbook on human intelligence, used in highly selective universities throughout the English-speaking world, with extensive references to research literature.
- Hunt, Earl (2011). Human Intelligence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-70781-7. Lay summary (28 April 2013). First edition of a comprehensive textbook by a veteran scholar of human intelligence.
- Nisbett, Richard E.; Aronson, Joshua; Blair, Clancy; Dickens, William; Flynn, James; Halpern, Diane F.; Turkheimer, Eric (2012). "Intelligence: new findings and theoretical developments" (PDF). American Psychologist. 67 (2): 130–159. doi:10.1037/a0026699. ISSN 0003-066X. PMID 22233090. Retrieved 22 July 2013. Lay summary (22 July 2013). Major review article in a flagship publication of the American Psychological Association, a thorough review of current research.
- Sternberg, Robert J.; Kaufman, Scott Barry, eds. (2011). The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521739115. Lay summary (22 July 2013). Authoritative handbook for graduate students and practitioners, with chapters by a variety of authors on most aspects of human intelligence.
External links[edit]
- APA Task Force Examines the Knowns and Unknowns of Intelligence - American Psychologist, February 1996
- The cognitive-psychology approach vs. psychometric approach to intelligence - American Scientist magazine
- History of Influences in the Development of Intelligence Theory and Testing - Developed by Jonathan Plucker at Indiana University
Scholarly journals and societies