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Associative learning predicts intelligence above and beyond working memory and processing speed
Authors:Scott Barry Kaufman  Colin G. DeYoung  Jeremy R. Gray  Jamie Brown  Nicholas Mackintosh
Affiliation:1. Texas A & M University-Kingsville, USA;2. University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada
Abstract:Recent evidence suggests the existence of multiple cognitive mechanisms that support the general cognitive ability factor (g). Working memory and processing speed are the two best established candidate mechanisms. Relatively little attention has been given to the possibility that associative learning is an additional mechanism contributing to g. The present study tested the hypothesis that associative learning ability, as assessed by psychometrically sound associative learning tasks, would predict variance in g above and beyond the variance predicted by working memory capacity and processing speed. This hypothesis was confirmed in a sample of 169 adolescents, using structural equation modeling. Associative learning, working memory, and processing speed all contributed significant unique variance to g, indicating not only that multiple elementary cognitive processes underlie intelligence, but also the novel finding that associative learning is one such process.
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