Intelligence. Deary, I. J Annual review of psychology, 63:453–82, January, 2012. Paper doi abstract bibtex Individual differences in human intelligence are of interest to a wide range of psychologists and to many people outside the discipline. This overview of contributions to intelligence research covers the first decade of the twenty-first century. There is a survey of some of the major books that appeared since 2000, at different levels of expertise and from different points of view. Contributions to the phenotype of intelligence differences are discussed, as well as some contributions to causes and consequences of intelligence differences. The major causal issues covered concern the environment and genetics, and how intelligence differences are being mapped to brain differences. The major outcomes discussed are health, education, and socioeconomic status. Aging and intelligence are discussed, as are sex differences in intelligence and whether twins and singletons differ in intelligence. More generally, the degree to which intelligence has become a part of broader research in neuroscience, health, and social science is discussed.
@article{deary_intelligence._2012,
title = {Intelligence.},
volume = {63},
issn = {1545-2085},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21943169},
doi = {10.1146/annurev-psych-120710-100353},
abstract = {Individual differences in human intelligence are of interest to a wide range of psychologists and to many people outside the discipline. This overview of contributions to intelligence research covers the first decade of the twenty-first century. There is a survey of some of the major books that appeared since 2000, at different levels of expertise and from different points of view. Contributions to the phenotype of intelligence differences are discussed, as well as some contributions to causes and consequences of intelligence differences. The major causal issues covered concern the environment and genetics, and how intelligence differences are being mapped to brain differences. The major outcomes discussed are health, education, and socioeconomic status. Aging and intelligence are discussed, as are sex differences in intelligence and whether twins and singletons differ in intelligence. More generally, the degree to which intelligence has become a part of broader research in neuroscience, health, and social science is discussed.},
urldate = {2012-07-13},
journal = {Annual review of psychology},
author = {Deary, Ian J},
month = jan,
year = {2012},
pmid = {21943169},
keywords = {Aging, Aging: genetics, Cognition, Educational Status, Environment, Humans, Individuality, Intelligence, Intelligence Tests, Intelligence: genetics, Social Class, Twins, Twins: genetics},
pages = {453--82},
}
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