Formal-Logic Development Program: Effects on Fluid Intelligence and on Inductive Reasoning Stages

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
pp. 1234-1248
Author(s):  
Cristiano Gomes
2002 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Josef Klauer ◽  
Klaus Willmes ◽  
Gary D Phye

2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan J. Troche ◽  
Felicitas L. Wagner ◽  
Karl Schweizer ◽  
Thomas H. Rammsayer

Abstract. Although all four subtests of Cattell’s Culture Fair Test (CFT) claim to measure inductive reasoning as a facet of fluid intelligence, previous studies indicated surprisingly weak correlations among them. In the present study, we applied a fixed-links modeling approach on CFT-20R data of 206 participants to control for the confounding influence of the item-position effect on test performance and to reevaluate the structural validity of the CFT-20R. Controlling for the item-position effect resulted in two latent variables representing inductive reasoning for CFT-20R subtests Series and Matrices and subtests Classifications and Topologies, respectively. Given the correlation of r = .61 between these two latent variables, the structural validity of the CFT-20R proved to be better than suggested by traditional correlations between test scores.


Gerontology ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 372-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xi Chen ◽  
Christopher Hertzog ◽  
Denise C. Park

Background: An important aspect of successful aging is maintaining the ability to solve everyday problems encountered in daily life. The limited evidence today suggests that everyday problem solving ability increases from young adulthood to middle age, but decreases in older age. Objectives: The present study examined age differences in the relative contributions of fluid and crystallized abilities to solving problems on the Everyday Problems Test (EPT). We hypothesized that due to diminishing fluid resources available with advanced age, crystallized knowledge would become increasingly important in predicting everyday problem solving with greater age. Method: Two hundred and twenty-one healthy adults from the Dallas Lifespan Brain Study, aged 24-93 years, completed a cognitive battery that included measures of fluid ability (i.e., processing speed, working memory, inductive reasoning) and crystallized ability (i.e., multiple measures of vocabulary). These measures were used to predict performance on EPT. Results: Everyday problem solving showed an increase in performance from young to early middle age, with performance beginning to decrease at about age of 50 years. As hypothesized, fluid ability was the primary predictor of performance on everyday problem solving for young adults, but with increasing age, crystallized ability became the dominant predictor. Conclusion: This study provides evidence that everyday problem solving ability differs with age, and, more importantly, that the processes underlying it differ with age as well. The findings indicate that older adults increasingly rely on knowledge to support everyday problem solving, whereas young adults rely almost exclusively on fluid intelligence.


2015 ◽  
Vol 109 (3) ◽  
pp. 450-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
JAMES D. FEARON ◽  
MACARTAN HUMPHREYS ◽  
JEREMY M. WEINSTEIN

Social cooperation is critical to a wide variety of political and economic outcomes. For this reason, international donors have embraced interventions designed to strengthen the ability of communities to solve collective-action problems, especially in post-conflict settings. We exploit the random assignment of a development program in Liberia to assess the effects of such interventions. Using a matching funds experiment we find evidence that these interventions can alter cooperation capacity. However, we observe effects only in communities in which, by design, both men and women faced the collective action challenge. Focusing on mechanisms, we find evidence that program effects worked through improvements in mobilization capacity that may have enhanced communities’ ability to coordinate to solve mixed gender problems. These gains did not operate in areas where only women took part in the matching funds experiment, possibly because they could rely on traditional institutions unaffected by the external intervention. The combined evidence suggests that the impact of donor interventions designed to enhance cooperation can depend critically on the kinds of social dilemmas that communities face, and the flexibility they have in determining who should solve them.


2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 82-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie von Stumm

Intelligence-as-knowledge in adulthood is influenced by individual differences in intelligence-as-process (i.e., fluid intelligence) and in personality traits that determine when, where, and how people invest their intelligence over time. Here, the relationship between two investment traits (i.e., Openness to Experience and Need for Cognition), intelligence-as-process and intelligence-as-knowledge, as assessed by a battery of crystallized intelligence tests and a new knowledge measure, was examined. The results showed that (1) both investment traits were positively associated with intelligence-as-knowledge; (2) this effect was stronger for Openness to Experience than for Need for Cognition; and (3) associations between investment and intelligence-as-knowledge reduced when adjusting for intelligence-as-process but remained mostly significant.


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