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E-grāmata: Looking Down on Human Intelligence: From Psychometrics to the Brain illustrated edition [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

(Professor of Differential Psychology, University of Edinburgh)
  • Formāts: 392 pages, line figures
  • Sērija : Oxford Psychology Series 36
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Sep-2000
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198524175
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 392 pages, line figures
  • Sērija : Oxford Psychology Series 36
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Sep-2000
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198524175
What is it about human brains that make some people more capable than others? In an authoritative and critical account, Professor Ian Dreary reviews historical, cognitive, and biological research on the foundations of human mental ability. Where most previous accounts of intelligence have examined how human mental ability can predict success in education, work, and social life, few books have taken as a starting point mental ability (and individual differences in intelligence), and attempted to see what factors could have influenced, and have even predicted mental ability. This book reveals what we know about the origins of intelligence. It describes research on genetic influences on intelligence, and evidence that has been obtained from biological studies, including examinations of 'brain size', event related potentials, and the recent profusion of studies involving functional brain imaging. Coupled with fascinating historical stories, the book provides a highly original and thought provoking guide to try and answer the age old question of why some people seem more clever than others.

Papildus informācija

Winner of Winner of the British Psychological Society Book Award 2002.Winner of the British Psychological Society Book Award 2002
Little g and Friends 1(33) An exposition of psychometric intelligence differences. The anatomy (or geography) of that which has to be explained Four Intelligent Reductionists 34(31) Looking down on human intelligence from Socrates to Spearman The Discriminating mind 65(23) Intelligence and sensory discrimination in the early twentieth century, and the more recent rise of joint experimental-differential approaches to human mental ability differences Vade-Mecum 88(26) Desperately seeking a mental cytology Cake-Slicing 114(32) Cognitive reductionism with self-sufficiency Faster, Smarter? 146(36) Reaction times: raking around in cognitive psychology Quick on the Uptake 182(41) Inspection times: raking around in psychophysics Wisdom from the Ages 223(38) Slowing of speed of information processing is cognitive ageing!? Wetware 261(52) Peter G. Caryl Alasdair J. MacLullich Reaching for the brain: raking around in biological sciences Den Finger in Die Wunde Legen 313(15) Avoiding `cargo cult science and `the glass bead game References 328(37) Index 365