Human Intelligence Measured, Located on Brain Scan
Scientists at Cal Tech, the University of Iowa, USC, and the Autonomous University of Madrid, claim to have constructed brain maps that localise the parts of the brain most "important to general intelligence."
The study, to be published the week of February 22 in the early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, adds new insight to a highly controversial question: What is intelligence, and how can we measure it?This is the type of information needed to place the study on human intelligence on a more objective basis. Political activists in academia have attempted to obstruct the study of human intelligence for decades, with some success. As the theories and technology for studying intelligence improve, political influences should wane somewhat.
The research team included Jan Gläscher, first author on the paper and a postdoctoral fellow at Caltech, and Ralph Adolphs, the Bren Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience and professor of biology. The Caltech scientists teamed up with researchers at the University of Iowa and USC to examine a uniquely large data set of 241 brain-lesion patients who all had taken IQ tests. The researchers mapped the location of each patient's lesion in their brains, and correlated that with each patient's IQ score to produce a map of the brain regions that influence intelligence.
"General intelligence, often referred to as Spearman's g-factor, has been a highly contentious concept," says Adolphs. "But the basic idea underlying it is undisputed: on average, people's scores across many different kinds of tests are correlated. Some people just get generally high scores, whereas others get generally low scores. So it is an obvious next question to ask whether such a general ability might depend on specific brain regions."
The researchers found that, rather than residing in a single structure, general intelligence is determined by a network of regions across both sides of the brain.
"One of the main findings that really struck us was that there was a distributed system here. Several brain regions, and the connections between them, were what was most important to general intelligence," explains Gläscher.
"It might have turned out that general intelligence doesn't depend on specific brain areas at all, and just has to do with how the whole brain functions," adds Adolphs. "But that's not what we found. In fact, the particular regions and connections we found are quite in line with an existing theory about intelligence called the 'parieto-frontal integration theory.' It says that general intelligence depends on the brain's ability to integrate—to pull together—several different kinds of processing, such as working memory."
The researchers say the findings will open the door to further investigations about how the brain, intelligence, and environment all interact. _SD_via_kurzweilai.net
Labels: brain imaging, Intelligence
3 Comments:
Thank you for all of information that you distill.
You are welcome.
The original purpose of this blog was to provide links to websites with information about disruptive and transformational technologies.
Along the way, I started to write down a few reactions to news and research stories, trying to relate them to the underlying theme of the blog -- the next level, and surviving to reach it.
As a result, this website tries to do too much. Other bloggers such as Brian Wang, Brian Westenhaus, Tom Nelson, Bruce Hall, etc etc do a much better job covering particular areas of interest.
With this blog, you never know what you will find.
ANd that's the main reason it's on the top of my lists. Glad I found you a few months back.
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