Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
929149 Intelligence 2011 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Sex differences in the latent general and broad cognitive abilities underlying the Differential Ability Scales, Second Edition were investigated for children and youth ages 5 through 17. Multi-group mean and covariance structural equation modeling was used to investigate sex differences in latent cognitive abilities as well as changes in these differences across age. Most broad abilities showed mean differences across the sexes, and all such differences varied across ages. Girls showed an advantage on the processing speed (Gs) first-order residual factor. Girls also showed advantages at some ages on free-recall memory, a narrow ability of long term retrieval (Glr). Boys showed a developmentally-related advantage on a visual–spatial ability (Gv) first-order residual factor, depending on age. Younger girls showed an advantage on short-term memory (Gsm). No statistically significant sex differences were shown on the latent comprehension-knowledge (Gc) factor, or on a second-order, latent g factor. Boys showed larger variances for several broad abilities, some substantial, but those differences were not statistically significant.

► Sex differences in intelligence examined with a new test for children and youth. ► Multi-group structural equation modeling using the DAS-II standardization data. ► Results showed sex differences favoring girls on processing speed and memory tasks. ► Boys showed an advantage on visual–spatial ability. ► All sex differences varied developmentally.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
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