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.
Traits and aspects
editIn groups
editIn 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
Augmented with technology
editCapacities
editTypes of people, by intelligence
editHigh
editLow
editModels and theories
editRelated factors
editFields 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
- Army General Classification Test
- Block design test
- Bracken School Readiness Assessment
- Cattell Culture Fair III
- Cognitive Abilities Test
- Differential Ability Scales
- Figure Reasoning Test
- 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
editOrganizations
editPublications
editScholars and researchers
edit- Anne Anastasi (1908–2001)
- Timothy Bates
- Camilla Benbow
- Ruth Benedict (1887–1948)
- Alfred Binet (1857–1911)
- Thomas J. Bouchard, Jr.
- Chris Brand
- 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 (1916–1997)
- Jefferson Fish
- James R. Flynn
- Francis Galton (1822–1911)
- Howard Gardner
- Henry H. Goddard (1866–1957)
- 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 (1923–2012)
- 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
- Jonathan M. Marks
- Frank C. J. McGurk (1910–1995)
- Ulric Neisser
- Helmuth Nyborg
- R. Travis Osborne
- John C. Raven
- Cecil R. Reynolds
- J. Philippe Rushton (1943–2012)
- Sandra Scarr
- Théodore Simon
- Charles Spearman
- Herman H. Spitz
- William Stern
- Robert Sternberg
- Lewis Terman (1877–1956)
- Lee A. Thompson
- Louis Leon Thurstone
- Ellis Paul Torrance
- Ledyard Tucker
- Philip A. Vernon
- David Wechsler
- Volkmar Weiss
- Lee Willerman
- Robert Yerkes (1876–1956)
See also
editFurther reading
edit- Mackintosh, N. J. (2011). IQ and Human Intelligence (second ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-958559-5. 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. 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. Major review article in a flagship publication of the American Psychological Association, a thorough review of current research.
- "The latest on intelligence". Daniel Willingham--Science & Education. 2012-05-10.
- Sternberg, Robert J.; Kaufman, Scott Barry, eds. (2011). The Cambridge Handbook of Intelligence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521739115. 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