Perceptions of the Malleability of Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence

There is significant variation in lay people's beliefs about the nature of intelligence: Some believe that intelligence is relatively fixed and innate, whereas others view intelligence as more malleable and affected by experience. However, most studies in this domain do not explicitly define in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2021-05, Vol.150 (5), p.815-827
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Xin, Nancekivell, Shaylene, Gelman, Susan A., Shah, Priti
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container_issue 5
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container_title Journal of experimental psychology. General
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creator Sun, Xin
Nancekivell, Shaylene
Gelman, Susan A.
Shah, Priti
description There is significant variation in lay people's beliefs about the nature of intelligence: Some believe that intelligence is relatively fixed and innate, whereas others view intelligence as more malleable and affected by experience. However, most studies in this domain do not explicitly define intelligence when probing about beliefs about intelligence and aptitude. Thus, variation in beliefs may reflect variation in how intelligence is defined. To address this issue, we conducted 3 studies examining individuals' beliefs about fluid versus crystallized intelligence. Study 1 used a modified version of Dweck's (1999) mindset questionnaire and found that people have more fixed views about fluid intelligence than either crystallized intelligence or intelligence in general. Study 2 used a switched-at-birth paradigm and found that individuals hold more essentialist beliefs about fluid intelligence than crystallized intelligence. Study 3 added a survey that probed participants' beliefs about mathematics achievement. It found that when reasoning about mathematics achievements, participants' attributions of ability and effort were differentially associated with their crystallized and fluid mindset beliefs. Specifically, mindsets of fluid intelligence were more associated with effort for professional-level mathematics achievements, whereas mindsets of crystallized intelligence were more associated with elementary-level mathematics achievements. Together, the present studies highlight the importance of considering the definition of intelligence when assessing related beliefs about malleability, inheritance, and achievement.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/xge0000980
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source APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Ability
Crystallization
Energy Expenditure
Female
Fluid dynamics
Fluid Intelligence
Human
Intelligence
Male
Mathematics
Mathematics Achievement
Mind
Mindset
Reasoning
Test Construction
title Perceptions of the Malleability of Fluid and Crystallized Intelligence
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