Intelligence Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Intelligence, including details on iq, testing, nature vs nurture, cognition. | ||||||||
|
Not all executive functions are related to intelligence.Friedman NP, Miyake A, Corley RP, Young SE, Defries JC, Hewitt JK Institute for Behavioral Genetics, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA. naomi.friedman@colorado.edu Accumulating evidence suggests that executive functions (EFs) are related to intelligence, despite neuropsychological results initially considered evidence of no such relation. However, findings that EFs are not unitary raise the issue of how intelligence relates to different EFs. This study examined the relations of fluid and crystallized intelligence and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale IQ to three separable EFs--inhibiting prepotent responses (inhibiting), shifting mental sets (shifting), and updating working memory (updating)--in young adults. Updating was highly correlated with the intelligence measures, but inhibiting and shifting were not. Furthermore, in structural equation models controlling for the inter-EF correlations, updating remained strongly related to intelligence, but the relations of inhibiting and shifting to intelligence were small and not significant. The results indicate that intelligence measures differentially relate to these three EFs, suggesting that current intelligence measures do not equally assess a wide range of executive control abilities likely required for many "intelligent" behaviors. Published 9 February 2006 in Psychol Sci, 17(2): 172-9.
© 2005-2008 Intelligence Research Today. All Rights Reserved. |
| ||||||