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Chccodebook 1

The document discusses the Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) model of cognitive abilities, which is considered the consensus taxonomy of human intelligence. It defines several broad and narrow cognitive abilities, provides the current status of the CHC taxonomy, and gives examples of how specific abilities like fluid reasoning and short-term working memory are defined and measured. The CHC model aims to classify and categorize human intelligence in an organized way, analogous to the Periodic Table of Elements.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
46 views42 pages

Chccodebook 1

The document discusses the Cattell-Horn-Carroll (CHC) model of cognitive abilities, which is considered the consensus taxonomy of human intelligence. It defines several broad and narrow cognitive abilities, provides the current status of the CHC taxonomy, and gives examples of how specific abilities like fluid reasoning and short-term working memory are defined and measured. The CHC model aims to classify and categorize human intelligence in an organized way, analogous to the Periodic Table of Elements.

Uploaded by

APOORV MISHRA
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Gf

Gc Gwm The CHC taxonomy of


Gs
Glr
g Ga
cognitive abilities codebook:
Grw
Gv Gq

Current status

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
The CHC definitions included in this document are adapted from Schneider
and McGrew (2012) and McGrew, LaForte and Schrank (2014), which
include more in-depth definitions.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics; Kevin McGrew 06-18-14


John Horn, compared the process of classifying
and categorizing human abilities and
intelligence to “slicing smoke”. (Horn, 1991)

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


Gc Gwm Contemporary
Gf

Glr
Gs psychometric
g
Grw
Ga
research has
Gv Gq
converged on the
Cattell-Horn-Carroll
(CHC) model of
cognitive abilities as
the consensus
working taxonomy
of human
intelligence
© Institute for Applied
Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin
McGrew 06-14-14
From
Gc Gwm
Gf
Gs
Glr g
Ga
Grw
Gv Gq

The CHC taxonomy of cognitive abilities:


Current status
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Grw Gq Go Gk
Ga Gh
Gc Gkn Gv Gp
Sensory Motor
Acquired Knowledge Sensory-Motor Domain-Specific Abilities
(From Schneider & McGrew, 2012)

Gps
Gf Gsm Glr
Gs Gt
Memory General Speed
Conceptual Grouping
Parameters of Cognitive Efficiency
Functional Grouping
Domain-Independent General Capacities
CHC model is analogous to the Periodic Table of Elements in Chemistry
I RG RQ
Ideas Words Figures
WM MS AC
Domain-Independent
Capacities

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

P N R9
Broad ability Glr-Learning efficiency
R1 R2 R4 R7 IT Glr-Retrieval fluency
Narrow ability

R3 PT MT

LD VL K0 LS CM MY The CHC Periodic


Acquired Knowledge

Table of Human
Systems

KL K1 K2 A5 MK KF LP BC
Abilities
V RD RC RS WA SG EU WS Adapted from Schneider & McGrew (2012)
and McGrew, LaForte and Schrank (2014)
KM A3
Sensory-Motor Domain-

Vz SR MV CS SS CF IM PI LE IL PN
Specific Abilities

U1
PC US UM U8 UR UP UL © Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
U9
Dr. Kevin McGrew 3-28-14
Sensory Motor

OM PI P2 P3 P4 P6 P7 A1
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 4-11-14
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 4-11-14
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 4-11-14
Gc Gwm Defining and
Gf
Gs measuring fluid
Glr
g Ga reasoning (Gf)
Grw
Gv Gq

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
I RG RQ

Fluid Reasoning (Gf):


Definition & features

The deliberate but flexible control of attention to solve novel


“on the spot” problems that cannot be performed by relying
exclusively on previously learned habits, schemas, and scripts.

• Solving unfamiliar problems (novel problem solving).

• Most evident in abstract reasoning that depends less on prior learning.

• Deductive and inductive reasoning are primary characteristics.

• Inferential reasoning; concept formation; classification of unfamiliar


stimuli; hypothesis generation and confirmation; identification of relevant
similarities; the perception of relevant consequences of newly acquired
knowledge; extrapolation of reasonable estimates in ambiguous situations.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
I RG RQ

Fluid Reasoning (Gf):


Narrow abilities and
definitions
Induction (I): The ability to observe a phenomenon and discover
the underlying principles or rules that determine its behavior.

General Sequential Reasoning (RG): The ability to reason logically


using known premises and principles. This ability also is known as
deductive reasoning or rule application.

Quantitative Reasoning (RQ): The ability to reason, either with


induction or deduction, with numbers, mathematical relations,
and operators.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Gc Gwm Defining and
Gf
Gs measuring
Glr
g Ga short-term
Grw
Gv Gq working
memory (Gwm)

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
WM MS AC

Short-term working memory (Gwm)


Definition & features

The ability to encode, maintain, and manipulate


information in one’s immediate awareness.

• A limited capacity system.

• Loses information quickly through decay of


memory traces, unless individual activates other
cognitive resources to maintain the information in
immediate awareness.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


WM MS AC

Short-term working memory (Gwm)


narrow definitions

Working Memory Capacity (WM): The ability to direct the focus of attention
to perform relatively simple manipulations, combinations, and
transformations of information within primary memory while avoiding
distracting stimuli and engaging in strategic/controlled searches for
information in secondary memory.

Memory Span (MS): The ability to encode information, maintain it in primary


memory, and immediately reproduce the information in the same sequence in
which it was represented

Attentional Control (AC): The ability to focus on task-relevant stimuli and


ignore task-irrelevant stimuli. The ability to regulate intentionality and direct
cognitive processing. Sometimes referred to as spotlight or focal attention,
focus, control of attention, executive controlled attention, or executive
attention © Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Gc Gwm
Gf
Gs
Defining and
Glr
g Ga
measuring long-
Grw
Gv Gq
term retrieval (Glr)

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Learning efficiency Learning retrieval

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

Long-Term Retrieval (Glr)


Definition & features

The ability to store, consolidate, and retrieve information over periods


of time measured in minutes, hours, days, and years.
• A Glr test involves information that has been put out of immediate
awareness long enough for the contents of primary memory to be
displaced completely.
• Retrieving and recreating information from long-term memory.
• Learning efficiency abilities: Tasks were more information is presented
than can be retained in Gwm.
• Learning retrieval fluency abilities: The rate and fluency at which
individuals can access information stored in long-term memory
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Learning efficiency Learning retrieval

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

Long-Term Retrieval (Glr)


Narrow ability definitions

Associative Memory (MA): The ability to remember previously


unrelated information as having been paired.

Meaningful Memory (MM): The ability to remember narratives


and other forms of semantically related information.

Free Recall Memory (M6): The ability to recall lists in any order.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


Learning efficiency Learning retrieval

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

Fluency abilities that involve the Long-Term Retrieval (Glr)


production of ideas Narrow ability definitions

Ideational Fluency (FI): The ability to rapidly produce a series of


ideas, words, or phrases related to a specific condition or object.
Quantity, not quality or response originality, is emphasized.

Associational Fluency (FA): The ability to rapidly produce a series


of original or useful ideas related to a particular concept. In
contrast to Ideational Fluency (FI), quality, rather quantity of
production, is emphasized.

Expressional Fluency (FE): The ability to rapidly think of different


ways of expressing an idea.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Learning efficiency Learning retrieval

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

Fluency abilities that involve the Long-Term Retrieval (Glr)


production of ideas Narrow ability definitions

Sensitivity to Problems/Alterative Solution Fluency (SP): The


ability to rapidly think of a number of alternative solutions to a
particular practical problem.

Originality/Creativity (FO): The ability to rapidly produce original,


clever, and insightful responses (expressions, interpretations) to a
given topic, situation, or task.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


Learning efficiency Learning retrieval

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

Fluency abilities that involve the Long-Term Retrieval (Glr)


recall of words Narrow ability definitions
Naming Facility (NA): The ability to rapidly call objects by their names.
In contemporary reading research, this ability is called rapid automatic
naming (RAN), or speed of lexical access.

Word Fluency (FW): The ability to rapidly produce words that share a
phonological (e.g., fluency of retrieval of words via a phonological cue) or
semantic feature (e.g., fluency of retrieval of words via a meaning-based
representation). Also includes the ability to rapidly produce words that
share nonsemantic features (e.g., fluency of retrieval of words starting
with the letter T).

Speed of Lexical Access (LA): The ability to rapidly and fluently retrieve
words from an individual’s lexicon; verbal efficiency or automaticity of
lexical access.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Learning efficiency Learning retrieval

MA MM M6 FI FA FE SP F0 NA FW LA FF FX

Fluency abilities that Long-Term Retrieval (Glr)


involve figures Narrow ability definitions

Figural Fluency (FF): The ability to rapidly draw or sketch as


many things (or elaborations) as possible when presented with
a non-meaningful visual stimulus (e.g., set of unique visual
elements). Quantity is emphasized over quality.

Figural Flexibility (FX): The ability to rapidly draw different


solutions to figural problems.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


Gwm
Gf
Gc
Defining and
Gs
Glr
g
measuring processing
Ga
Grw
speed (Gs)
Gv Gq

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
P N R9

Processing Speed (Gs)


Definition & features

The ability to perform both simple and complex repetitive


cognitive tasks quickly and fluently.

Automaticity.

Fluency of performing tasks.

Speed of executing relatively over-learned cognitive


processes.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


P N R9

Processing Speed (Gs)


Narrow ability definitions

Perceptual Speed (P): The speed at which visual stimuli can be compared
for similarities or differences.

Number Facility (N): The ability to manipulate numbers in working


memory, and the speed of number pattern comparison. It includes the
speed at which basic arithmetic operations are performed accurately.

Rate-of-Test-Taking (R9): The speed and fluency with which simple


cognitive tests are completed. Through the lens of CHC theory, the
definition of this factor has narrowed to simple tests that do not require
visual comparison (P) or mental arithmetic (N).

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


Gc Gwm Defining and
Gf
Gs measuring
Glr
g Ga comprehension-
Grw
Gv Gq knowledge (Gc)

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
LD VL K0 LS CM MY

Comprehension – Knowledge (Gc)


Definition & features

The depth and breadth of knowledge and skills that


are valued by one’s culture.

• Skills and knowledge valued in a culture.

• The degree to which a person has learned


practically useful knowledge of language,
information, and concepts specific to a culture.

• Store of verbal or language-based knowledge.


© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
LD VL K0 LS CM MY

Comprehension – Knowledge (Gc)


Narrow ability definitions

Language Development (LD): The general understanding of spoken


language at the level of words, idioms, and sentences. Language
Development is at the core of Gc—understanding words in context.

Lexical Knowledge (VL): The knowledge of the definitions of words


and the concepts that underlie them. Understanding the definitions of
words in isolation. Vocabulary.

General (Verbal) Information (K0): The breadth and depth of


knowledge that one’s culture deems essential, practical, or otherwise
worthwhile for everyone to know.

© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14


LD VL K0 LS CM MY

Comprehension – Knowledge (Gc)


Narrow ability definitions

Listening Ability (LS): The ability to understand speech. Tests of listening


ability typically have simple vocabulary but increasingly complex syntax
or increasingly long speech samples to listen to.

Communication Ability (CM): The ability to use speech to communicate


one’s thoughts clearly. This ability is comparable to Listening Ability
except that it is productive (expressive) rather than receptive.

Grammatical Sensitivity (MY): The awareness of the formal rules of


grammar and morphology of words in speech.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Gc Gwm Defining and
Gf
Gs measuring visual
Glr
g Ga processing (Gv)
Grw
Gv Gq

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Vz SR MV CS SS CF IM PI LE IL PN

Visual Processing (Gv)


Definition & features
The ability to make use of simulated mental imagery (often in
conjunction with currently perceived images) to solve
problems.

• Ability to generate, retain, retrieve, and transform well-structured


visual images

• The ability to perceive and transform visual shapes, forms, or


images

• The ability to maintain spatial orientation with regard to objects


that may change or move through space

• Processing visual shapes or images “in the minds eye”


© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Vz SR MV CS SS CF IM PI LE IL PN

Visual Processing (Gv)


Narrow ability definitions

Visualization (Vz): The ability to perceive complex patterns and


mentally simulate how they might look when transformed (e.g.,
rotated, changed in size, partially obscured, and so forth). Vz is the
core ability of Gv.

Speeded Rotation (Spatial Relations; SR): The ability to solve visual


problems quickly using mental rotation of simple images. The speed at
which mental rotation tasks is completed is what is different from Vz.

Visual Memory (MV): The ability to remember complex images


over short periods of time (less than 30 seconds). The tasks that
define this factor involve being shown complex images and then
identifying them soon after then stimulus is removed.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Vz SR MV CS SS CF IM PI LE IL PN

Visual Processing (Gv)


Narrow ability definitions
Closure Speed (CS): The ability to quickly identify a familiar, meaningful visual
object from incomplete (e.g., vague, partially obscured, disconnected) visual
stimuli without knowing in advance what the object is. This ability is
sometimes called Gestalt Perception because it requires people to “fill in”
unseen or missing parts of an image to visualize a single percept.

Spatial Scanning (SS): The ability to quickly and accurately survey (visually
explore) a wide or complicated spatial field or pattern and to (a) identify a
particular target configuration or (b) identify a path through the field to a
determined end point. It is not clear whether this ability is related to complex
large-scale real-world navigation skills.

Flexibility of Closure (CF): The ability to identify a visual figure or pattern


embedded in a complex distracting or disguised visual pattern or array when
the pattern is known in advance.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Vz SR MV CS SS CF IM PI LE IL PN

Visual Processing (Gv)


Narrow ability definitions

Imagery (IM): The ability to mentally imagine very vivid images

Serial Perceptual Integration (PI): The ability to recognize an object


after only parts of it are shown in rapid succession.

Length Estimation (LE): The ability to visually estimate the length of


objects.

Perceptual Illusions (IL): The ability to not be fooled by visual


illusions.

Perceptual Alternations (PN): Consistency in the rate of alternating


between different visual perceptions.
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
Gc Gwm Defining and
Gf
Gs measuring
Glr
g Ga auditory
Grw
Gv Gq processing (Ga)

Dr. Kevin S. McGrew


Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP)
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
U1
PC US UM U8 UR UP UL
U9

Auditory Processing (Ga)


Definition & features
The ability to detect and process meaningful nonverbal
information in sound.
• Abilities that depend on sound as input and on the functioning or our
hearing apparatus.
• Key feature is the extent to which a person can cognitively “control” the
perception of auditory information.
• Wide range of abilities in this domain:

• Discriminating patterns in sounds an music


• Processing sounds with distracting background noise
• Analyze, manipulate, comprehend, and synthesize sound elements,
groups of sounds, or sound patterns
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
U1
PC US UM U8 UR UP UL
U9

Auditory Processing (Ga)


Narrow ability definitions
Phonetic Coding (PC): The ability to hear phonemes distinctly. This
ability also is referred to as phonological processing and phonological
awareness. People with poor phonetic coding have difficulty hearing
the internal structure of sound in words.

Speech Sound Discrimination (US): The ability to detect and


discriminate differences in speech sounds (other than phonemes) under
conditions of little or no distraction or distortion. Poor speech sound
discrimination can produce difficulty in the ability to distinguish
variations in tone, timbre, and pitch in speech.

Memory for Sound Patterns (UM): The ability to retain (on a short-term
basis) auditory codes such as tones, tonal patterns, or speech sounds .
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14
U1
PC US UM U8 UR UP UL
U9

Auditory Processing (Ga)


Narrow ability definitions

Maintaining and Judging Rhythm (U8): The ability to recognize and


maintain a musical beat.

Resistance to Auditory Stimulus Distortion (UR): The ability to


hear words correctly even under conditions of distortion or loud
background noise.

Musical Discrimination and Judgment (U1 U9): The ability to


discriminate and judge tonal patterns in music with respect to
melodic, harmonic, and expressive aspects (phrasing, tempo,
harmonic complexity, intensity variations).
© Institute for Applied Psychometrics (IAP) Dr. Kevin McGrew 06-14-14

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