Handbook of Understanding and Measuring Intelligence

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INCISBN: 9780761928874

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Edited by Oliver Wilhelm, Randall W. Engle
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SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
552

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Description

Oliver Wilhelm, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology at Humboldt-University Berlin, Germany. He earned his doctoral degree in 2000 from the Universeity of Mannheim and subsequently worked at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, and at the University of Arizona in Tucson. His research focuses on individual differences in working memory, reasoning, and mental speed. Additional research interests are in intellectual engagement, openness for new experiences, and cognitive failures and how these traits relate to various abilities. He is also doing experimental work on deductive reasoning and working memory. Randall W. Engle received his Ph.D. in 1973 from Ohio State University, where his mentor was D.D. Wickens. Following a 21 year tenure at the University of South Carolina, he moved to Atlanta, where he took the position of Professor and Chair of the School of Psychology at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He has published numerous papers and book chapters exploring the properties of attention and working memory capacity and their relationship to intelligence. Together with faculty colleagues across the globe, the Engle team, including former doctoral students and post docs, continues to pursue the nature of working memory capacity using micro-analytic experimental studies and macro-analytic factor analysis studies.

Preface Introduction (Intelligence: A Diva and a Work Horse) - O. Wilhelm, & R. W. Engle Assessing Problem Solving in Context - P. C. Kyllonen, & S. Lee Mental Speed: On Frameworks, Paradigms, and a Platform for the Future - V. Danthiir, R. D. Roberts, R. Schulze, & O. Wilhelm Cognitive Mechanisms Underlying Intelligence: Defense of a Reductionist Approach - A. R. A. Conway Working Memory Capacity, Attention Control, and Fluid Intelligence - R. P. Heitz, N. Unsworth, & R. W. Engle Emotional Intelligence: An Elusive Ability - G. Matthews, M. Zeidner, & R. D. Roberts Metacognition and Intelligence - C. Hertzog, & A. E. Robinson Knowledge and Intelligence - P. L. Ackerman, & M. E. Beier Full Frontal Fluidity? Looking in on the Neuroimaging of Reasoning and Intelligence - M. J. Kane Behavioral Genetics and Intelligence - S. A. Petrill A Dialectical Constructivist View of Developmental Intelligence - J. Pascual-Leone, & J. Johnson Development of Intellectual Abilities in Old Age: From Age Gradients to Individuals - M. Loevden, & U. Lindenberger Group Differences in Intelligence and Related Measures - W. W. Wittmann Modeling Structures of Intelligence - R. Schulze Item Response Theory and the Measurement of Cognitive Processes - F. Schmiedek g Factor: Issues of Design and Interpretation - L. Stankov Capturing Successful Intelligence Through Measures of Analytic, Creative, and Practical Skills - P. J. Henry, R. J. Sternberg, & E. L. Grigorenko Faceted Models of Intelligence - H.-M. Suess & A. Beauducel Assessing Intelligence: Past, Present, and Future - R. D. Roberts, P. M. Markham, M. Zeidner, & G. Matthews The Role of Domain Knowledge in Higher-Level Cognition - D. Z. Hambrick Measuring Reasoning Ability - O. Wilhelm The Measurement of Working Memory Capacity - K. Oberauer Working Memory, Intelligence, and Learning Disabilities - H. L. Swanson Cognitive Ability in Selection Decisions - D. S. Ones, C. Viswesvaran, & S. Dilchert Understanding Intelligence: A Summary and an Adjustable-Attention Hypothesis - N. Cowan To g or not to g - That Is the Question - N. Brody

"This volume provides an in-depth yet accessible and up-to-date review of the key topics pertinent to current intelligence research. This state-of-the-art summary about our theoretical understanding of human abilities and their measurement is of interest for researchers, practitioners, and advanced students in psychology, education, and related disciplines. It's a great summary and a good read on a truly important topic." -- Dr. Heinz Holling "Wilhelm and Engle have compiled a highly informative set of chapters on various topics related to intelligence. The chapters describing recent European work will be especially informative for North American readers. The work is strengthened by provision of review chapters that keep the reader in sight of the forest rather than the trees." -- Earl Hunt "...it is extremely useful and contemporary, covering among its five hundred pages, genetics, neuro-imaging and emotional intelligence. It also provides a good indicator of current psychological work in the area with empirical evidence and theory sitting alongside each other. The material on meta-cognition would, I suspect, be of most interest to philosophers, along with the more basic questions concerning the nature of memory and intelligence." -PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY -- Robert G. Hill

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