Relationships between factors of intelligence and brain volume |
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Authors: | John C. Wickett Philip A. Vernon Donald H. Lee |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, N6A 5C2, Canada;b Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, N6A 5A5, Canada |
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Abstract: | The recent explosion of studies aimed at determining the biological basis of intelligence has revealed that cognitive ability has a strong biological substrate. This study expands on this literature by examining the relation between cognitive ability and MRI-measured brain volume and head size in a sample of adult male siblings recruited from the London, Ontario community in Canada. It was found that brain volume correlated with IQ at 0.35 (P<0.01), thus replicating the results of past studies. Corrections for restriction of range and attenuation in both this and past studies suggest that the population value of the brain volume-IQ correlation is closer to 0.50. Head size variables, with one exception, also showed the expected positive correlations with IQ. The results of a vector analysis on factor scores indicated that the more highly g-loaded a test was the more highly it correlated with brain volume (r=0.59, P<0.01). The sum of the data suggested that although brain volume (and to a lesser extent, head size) is predictive of g, fluid ability, and memory, it does not predict crystallized ability. Unexpectedly, the higher the spatial imaging loading of a test, the less its correlation with brain volume (vector correlation=−0.84, P<0.001). |
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Keywords: | Intelligence Brain volume MRI Head size Cognitive factors |
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