Transcript Chapter 14
Cognitive Processes
PSY 334
Chapter 14 – Individual
Differences in Cognition
Gray Matter is Pruned
Ages 5-20
Gogtay et al., 2004
White Matter Increases
Ages 15 to 75
Prefrontal
cortex
Temporal
lobe
Bartzokis et al., 2001
What Changes?
Gray matter first thickens then thins as
neurons are weeded out and most-used
connections are strengthened.
Development is sensory and motor first,
then back-to-front with frontal areas last.
White matter increases with myelination
of axons providing interconnections.
This increases until age 50, then declines.
Both curves are quadratic, not linear.
What Develops
Two explanations for changes in
children’s thinking:
They think better – more working memory.
They know better – more facts.
Probably both occur, due to neural
changes:
Increase in synaptic connections.
Myelination increases neural transmission
speed.
Empiricist vs Nativist Debate
Not exactly a nature-nurture debate but
concerns where knowledge comes from.
Nativists argue that the most important
knowledge is part of genetically
programmed development.
Empiricists argue that virtually all
knowledge comes from experience with
the environment.
Implications for the potential to change.
Increased Mental Capacity
Case – memory-space proposal.
Growing working memory development is
the key to the developmental sequence.
Increased speed of neural function leads
to increased working memory.
Due to increased myelination
Kail – speed of mental rotation becomes
faster with age (8-22 yo).
Increased Knowledge
Chi – developmental differences may be
knowledge related.
Children do worse than adults on most
memory tasks.
Where children are skilled at chess and
adults are novices, children do better than
adults.
Novice-expert comparisons can explain
developmental differences.
Children do not elaborate effectively.
Korkel’s Results
Grade
Soccer Experts
Soccer Novices
3
54
32
5
52
33
7
61
42
There was no effect of grade level, only expertise.
Cognition and Aging
Decreases in IQ performance scores
occur after age 20:
Related to speed of response on tests.
Older adults do better on jobs.
Age-related declines in brain function:
Cell loss, shrinkage & atrophy.
Compensatory growth of remaining cells.
Brain-related degenerative disorders such
as Alzheimer’s.
Mean WAIS-R IQ Declines
Salthouse, 1992
Probability of a Philosopher’s
“Best Book” Declines with Age
Lehman, 1953
Ability to Hold Multiple
Premises in Mind Declines
Salthouse, 1992
Decline is NOT Disability
Note that substantial proportions of older
individuals are able to write “best books”
or do integrative reasoning even at 70.
Longitudinal and cross-sectional studies
have problems:
Age cohorts have different historical
experiences (Great Depression, nutrition)
Everyone declines from their own unique
baseline, not relative to a group.
Use it or Lose It
With cognitive exercise:
Number of neurons declines but number of
synapses per neuron increases.
Brain weight increases with age.
Without cognitive exercise:
Number of neurons and brain weight both
decline.
Number of synapses per neuron declines.
Learn new things and stay active!
Psychometrics
Measures of performance of individuals
on a number of tasks – examination of
correlations across such tasks.
IQ Tests – Binet, Stanford-Binet, Wechsler
Mental age vs deviation IQ.
Factor analysis of performance scores:
Crystallized intelligence – increases with
age
Fluid intelligence – decreases with age.
Distribution of S-B IQ Test
Scores
IQ Score
Traditional Ranking System
140 + (~.25%)
Genius or near genius
130 - 139
Gifted
120 - 129
Very Superior Intelligence
110 - 119
Superior Intelligence
90 - 109
Average/Normal
80 - 89
Dullness
70 - 79
Borderline deficiency
50 - 70
Mild mental retardation
35-50
Moderate mental retardation
20 - 35
Severe mental retardation
< 20
Profound mental retardation (1%)
Kinds of Abilities
Reasoning ability:
Sternberg connects psychometrics to the
information-processing approach.
People who score high on reasoning tests
perform reasoning steps more quickly.
Verbal ability:
Working memory capacity is related to
verbal ability.
People who recall words more rapidly do
better on verbal ability tests.
Kinds of Abilities (Cont.)
Spatial ability:
Rate of mental rotation is slower for those
with lower spatial ability test scores.
People with high spatial ability may choose
to solve a problem spatially, not verbally.
Differences in abilities may result from
differences in rates of processing and
working-memory capacities.
Unclear whether this is innate or a
difference in practice (nature vs nurture).