A set of abilities defined in various ways by different psychologists but generally agreed to include the ability to reason abstractly, the ability to profit from experience, and the ability to adapt to varying environmental contexts.
The best-known U.S. intelligence test. It was written by Lewis Terman and his associates at Stanford University and based on the first tests by Binet and Simon
Originally defined in terms of a child’s mental age and chronological age; is now computed by comparing a child’s performance with that of other children of the same chronological age.
Term used by Binet and Simon and Terman in the early calculation of IQ scores to refer to the age level of IQ test items a child could successfully answer. Used in combination with the child’s chronological age to calculate an IQ score.
The third revision of an intelligence and is designed for children between the ages of 2½ and 7.
The fourth edition of a well-known IQ test developed in the United States that includes both verbal and performance (nonverbal) subtests for children age 6-16.
Tests on the WISC-IV that tap verbal skills such as knowledge of vocabulary and general information.
Tests on the WISC-IV, such as block design and picture completion, that tap nonverbal visual-processing abilities.
Timed tests on the WISC-IV, such as symbol search, that measure how rapidly an examinee processes information.
Tests on the WISC-IV, such as digit span, that measure working memory efficiency.
The WISC-IV score that takes into account verbal and nonverbal scale scores.
The best-known and most widely used test of infant ‘intelligence.’
Test designed to assess a child’s learning of specific material taught in school, such as spelling or arithmetic computation
A person’s basic, underlying level of skill, displayed under ideal circumstances. It is not possible to measure it directly.
The behavior shown by a person under real-life rather than ideal circumstances. Even when researchers are interested in competence, all they can ever measure is this...
The stability of a test score over multiple testing sessions.
The degree to which a test measures what it is intended to measure
Characteristics of a family that affect all children in the household
Any difference between groups in IQ or achievement test scores that becomes larger over time.
Characteristics of a family that affect one child but not others in the household.
Term used by some psychologists for the range of possible outcomes (phenotypes) for some variable, given basic genetic patterning (the genotype).
A theory advanced by Robert Sternberg, proposing the existence of three types of intelligence: analytical, creative, and practical.
One of three types of intelligence in Sternberg’s triarchic theory of intelligence; the type of intelligence typically measured on IQ tests, including the ability to plan, remember facts, and organize information.
One of three types of intelligence described by Sternberg in his triarchic theory of intelligence; includes insightfulness and the ability to see new relationships among events or experiences.
One of three types of intelligence in Sternberg’s triarchic theory of intelligence; often called ‘street smarts,’ this type of intelligence includes skill in applying information to the real world or solving practical problems.
Eight types of intelligence (linguistic, logical/mathematical, spatial, bodily kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, intrapersonal, and naturalistic) proposed by Howard Gardner.
The ability to produce original, appropriate, and valuable ideas and/or solutions to problems.
The ability to produce multiple solutions to problems that have no clear answer.