Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7294590 Intelligence 2014 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Concerning the correlational structure of intelligence, there is a broad consensus regarding hierarchical models with a general factor at the apex (g), and less consensus regarding the number, content, and structure of more specific ability-factors hierarchically below g. Previous studies revealed very high correlations of test-battery-specific g-factors, whereas the consistency of more specific ability-factors has been neglected. In order to investigate this, current data stemming from N = 562 high school students who took 26 mental ability tests from independently developed test-batteries were analyzed. Regarding the intelligence-structure, nested-factor models revealed a (relatively) better fit than higher-order models and general-factor-models. The test-battery-specific g-factors of the nested-factor models were substantially correlated (r ≥ .91); the correlations of the test-battery-specific verbal and numerical factors evidenced convergent and discriminant validity (convergent correlations: verbal - r = .83; numerical - r = .46; figural - r = .22). These results provided evidence that some group factors (besides the g-factors) of different test-batteries are largely similar.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
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