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"...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 "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, University of Muenster
"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, University of Washington Without an
informed cognitive understanding of intelligence as a construct,
the technology of intelligence testing will make little to no
progress. Psychologists with a more psychometric background need
detailed knowledge about the cognitive processes underlying
intelligent behavior. Likewise, psychologists with a more cognitive
or experimental background need to make more use of applied
knowledge from psychometric research. Earl Hunt, Without an
informed cognitive understanding of intelligence as a construct,
the technology of intelligence testing will make little to no
progress. Psychologists with a more psychometric background need
detailed knowledge about the cognitive processes underlying
intelligent behavior. Likewise, psychologists with a more cognitive
or experimental background need to make more use of applied
knowledge from psychometric research.The Handbook of Understanding
and Measuring Intelligence provides an overview of recent studies
on intelligence to help readers develop a sound understanding of
results and perspectives in intelligence research. In this volume,
editors Oliver Wilhelm and Randall W. Engle bring together a group
of respected experts from two fields of intelligence research,
cognition and methods, to summarize, review, and evaluate research
in their areas of expertise. The chapters in this book present
state-of-the-art examinations of a particular domain of
intelligence research and highlight important methodological
considerations, theoretical claims, and pervasive problems in the
field. The Handbook provides those with a broad interest in
individual differences, cognitive abilities, intelligence,
educational measurement, thinking, reasoning, or problem solving
with a comprehensive description of the status quo and prospects of
intelligence research. The book is divided into two parts that are
intended to build upon and relate to one another. Part I, the
cognitive section, explores several theoretical viewpoints on
intelligence and Part II, the methodological section, addresses
fundamental statistical problems and pragmatic assessment problems
in measuring intelligence. Key Features The volume editors provide
a general introduction and conclude the book with an integrative
epilogue. Contributors to this volume are experts in intelligence
with a background in methodology or theory who offer current
theoretical perspectives and recent empirical results, which are of
interest to a broad audience. In addition to contributions from
U.S. intelligence experts, authors from Europe and Australia
provide an international perspective and articulate viewpoints and
results not otherwise readily available to an American audience.
Developments in theory are described with respect to their
implications at the measurement level, and developments on the
methodological level are evaluated with respect to their
contribution to the theoretical understanding of intelligence. The
Handbook is designed for scholars and psychology professionals
interested in intelligence, cognitive abilities, educational
testing and measurement, reasoning, and problem solving. It can
also be used by advanced undergraduate and graduate students
studying intelligence or the psychology of individual differences.
In addition, the Handbook will be a welcome addition to any
academic library.
The purpose of this contribution to the Counterpoints series is to compare and contrast different conceptions of working memory. This is one of the most important notions to have informed cognitive psychology over the last 20 years or so, and yet it has been used in a wide variety of ways. This, in part, is undoubtedly because contemporary usage of the phrase `working memory, encapsulates various themes that have appeared at different points in the history of research into human memory and cognition. This book presents three dominant views of working memory.
This new volume in the Counterpoints series compares and contrasts
different conceptions of working memory, generally recognized as
the human cognitive system responsible for temporary storage of
information. The book includes proponents of several different
views. Robert Logie discusses the theoretical and empirical utility
of separating working memory into an articulatory loop, a
phonological store, and a visuo-spatial sketchpad into visual and
spatial subsystems. Patricia Carpenter provides evidence for a
process view of working memory, arguing that both task-specific
processing and general processing capabilities can account for the
full range of working memory phenomena. She focuses on findings
from reading comprehension and memory tasks suggesting that working
memory is used to represent the set of skills and strategies
necessary for complex tasks, while retaining residual capacity for
use as a storage buffer. Lynn Hasher argues in favor of the new
inhibitory model, with evidence drawn from the literature on aging
and pathology that demonstrates parallels between memory disorders
and normal memory functioning. Randall Engle addresses the issue of
whether working memory resources are required for retrieval of
information or whether that task is relatively automatic. Engle's
empirical studies, in turn, bear directly on the positions of
Carpenter, Hasher, and Logie. As interest in working memory is
increasing at a rapid pace, an open discussion of the central
issues involved is both useful and timely. This work serves this
purpose for a wide audience of cognitive psychologists and their
students.
Cognitive and Working Memory Training assembles an
interdisciplinary group of distinguished authors-all experts in the
field-who have been testing the efficacy of cognitive and working
memory training using a combination of behavioral, neuroimaging,
meta-analytic, and computational modelling methods. This edited
volume is a defining resource on the practicality and utility of
the field of cognitive training research in general, and working
memory training in particular. Importantly, one focus of the book
is on the notion of transfer-namely, the extent to which cognitive
training-be it through music, video-game play, or working memory
demanding interventions at school-generalizes to learning and
performance measures that were decidedly not part of the training
regimen. As most cognitive scientists (and perhaps many casual
observers) recognize, the notions of cognitive training and
transfer have been widely controversial for many reasons, including
disagreement over the reliability of outcomes and consensus on
methodological "best practices," and even the ecological validity
of laboratory-based tests. This collection does not resolve these
debates of course; but its contribution is to address them directly
by creating an exchange in a single compendium among scientists
who, in separate research publications, do not always reach the
same conclusions. The book is organized around comprehensive
overview chapters from different disciplinary
perspectives-Cognitive Psychology (by Hicks and Engle),
Neuroscience (by Kuchinsky and Haarmann), and Development (by Ling
and Diamond)-that define major issues, terms, and themes in the
field, with a pointed set of challenge questions to which other
scientists respond in subsequent chapters. The goal of this volume
is to educate. It is designed for students and researchers, and
perhaps the armchair psychologist. Crucially, the contributors
recognize that it is good for science to persistently confront our
understanding of an area: Debate and alternative viewpoints, backed
by theory, data, and inferences drawn from the evidence, is what
advances scientific knowledge. This book probes established
paradigms in cognitive training research, and the long-form of
these chapters (not found in scientific journals) allows detailed
exploration of the current state of the science. Such breadth
intends to invite novel ways of thinking about the nature of
cognitive and perceptual plasticity, which may enlighten either new
efforts at training, new inferences about prior results, or both.
This book examines the major progress made in recent psychological
science in understanding the cognitive control of thought, emotion,
and behavior and what happens when that control is diminished as a
result of aging, depression, developmental disabilities, or
psychopathology. Each chapter of this volume reports the most
recent research by a leading researcher on the international stage.
Topics include the effects on thought, emotion, and behavior by
limitations in working memory, cognitive control, attention,
inhibition, and reasoning processes. Other chapters review standard
and emerging research paradigms and new findings on limitations in
cognitive functioning associated with aging and psychopathology.
The explicit goal behind this volume was to facilitate cross-area
research and training by familiarizing researchers with paradigms
and findings in areas different from but related to their own.
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