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Convergence between attention variables and factors of psychometric intelligence in older adults
Authors:Steven W. Cornelius  Sherry L. Willis  John R. Nesselroade  Paul B. Baltes
Affiliation:Cornell University, USA;The Pennsylvania State University, USA;The Pennsylvania State University, USA;Max Planck Institute for Human Development and Education, USA
Abstract:The purpose of the present study was to examine the hypothesis that individual differences on measures of attention would converge with select factors of psychometric intelligence, especially fluid intelligence and short-term acquisition and retrieval. A sample of 83 elderly adults (X = 71 years) was administered a battery of 17 psychometric ability tests. Tests were selected to mark four psychometric ability factors (Cattell and Horn's dimensions of fluid and crystallized intelligence, short-term acquisition and retrieval, and perceptual speed). Also, seven tasks representing four aspects of attention—decoding processes, selective attention, attention switching, and concentration—were administered. A confirmatory factor analysis was conducted to examine the relationships among the four psychometric ability factors and 11 variables obtained from the attention tasks. Results were only partially consistent with the hypothesized pattern of convergence. Two attention measures had significant loadings on a fluid-type intelligence factor, and one had a marginally significant loading on a short-term memory factor. In general, the greatest convergence occured between attention variables and the ability factor of Perceptual Speed. Results were discussed with respect to previous research on psychometric abilities and cognitive processes, the theory of fluid-crystallized intelligence, and their implications for understanding intellectual aging.
Keywords:Correspondence and requests for reprints should be sent to Steven W. Cornelius   Department of Human Development and Family Studies   Cornell University   Ithaca   NY 14853   or Sherry L. Willis   College of Human Development   The Pennsylvania State University   University Park   PA 16802 USA.
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