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There's More to Smarts Than IQ
Excerpt
By
Jennie Phipps, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Don't
think you're smart just because you aced the standard IQ test.
A new study supports the suspicion of those who never accepted
these tests as a true mirror of intelligence. The researchers
say the ability to visualize and solve problems is a very important
indicator of intelligence -- probably more important than other,
standard measures. The study appears in the December issue of
the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, published
by the American Psychological Association.
Lead study author Akira Miyake, assistant professor of psychology
at the University of Colorado at Boulder, says, "Our main
conclusion is that the ability to visualize information and manipulate
those images in your mind is at least as important as verbal skills
as a measure of intelligence."
Miyake likens these skills to "executive multi-tasking"
-- the ability to think about and solve various problems at once
and avoid impulsive tendencies and automatic, but incorrect responses.
"It requires a good mental sketch pad where you temporarily
maintain information that you can use when you need it,"
Miyake says.
He also says the importance of spatial intelligence is underestimated.
That's the ability, for instance, to visualize how to rearrange
furniture to make a room more functional or, on a more sophisticated
plain, to look at a mechanical problem and envision a solution.
He says his study suggests a close relationship between high intelligence
and good spatial relationship skills.
The study tested 167 university undergraduates. Each took a series
of pencil-and-paper and computer-based tests that measured their
ability to look at problems visually and resolve them. The tests
included determining ways to fold paper to make a desired shape
and identifying mirror images. Students who were good at quickly
solving complex visualization tasks also performed better on the
decision-making tasks, supporting the contention that visualization
and good decision-making are linked, Miyake says.
He says his study shows that traditional IQ tests that are heavily
weighted toward verbal ability are not good predictors of a person's
ability to function intelligently overall. Miyake concludes: "Intelligence
is something general. You have to figure out how to tackle a problem
and then monitor how your problem solving is going. The ability
to do this well is common to all kinds of intelligence, including
emotional intelligence."
Miyake is currently studying the question of whether people can
be trained to multi-task. He says his initial findings indicate
that practice makes perfect -- switching back and forth between
various combinations of the same tasks improves those skills,
but it doesn't seem to improve the overall ability to multi-task.
"There is probably some genetic component, some combination
of nature and nurture," he says.
He says just as reading to a young child seems to improve verbal
abilities, encouraging special skills by playing with blocks or
with Legos or a simple game like Simon Says may reinforce a child's
spatial abilities.
Not all experts in intelligence testing see the issue exactly
the same way. William T. Dickens of the Brookings Institution,
in Washington, D.C., says smart people test well no matter how
you test them. "The most basic finding in mental testing
is that people who are good at any one type of task tend to be
good at all mental tasks, so it doesn't matter much for most people
which talent you test," says Dickens.
Sandra Russ, professor of psychology at Case Western Reserve
University, in Cleveland, has been measuring children's coping
skills, which she says are similar to what Miyake identifies as
executive multi-tasking functions. Russ says coping skills are
separate from IQ. "There are low positive relationships between
IQ and tests that measure the ability to generate ideas and think
broadly. That's a kind of intelligence that's not measured on
[a] standard test."
What To Do
The theory of multiple intelligences is nothing new. Daniel B.
Stockstill, assistant professor of psychology at Harding University,
offers information and
links on the subject.
Researchers at the University of Limerick, in Ireland, have developed
a Web site on
spatial intelligence, including tutorials that they say will
help you get better at these skills.
To increase your child's abilities, check
The Learning Network.
Reference
Source 101
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