Mapping the evolving core of intelligence: Changing relations between executive control, reasoning, language, and awareness
Date
2017Author
Makris, N.Tachmatzidis, D.
Demetriou, Andreas P.
Spanoudis,George C.
Source
IntelligenceVolume
62Pages
12-30Google Scholar check
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
We explored relations between attention control, shifting flexibility, working memory, reasoning in different domains, awareness about reasoning, and language from 9 to 15 years of age. For this aim 198 9-, 11-, 13-, and 15-years old participants were examined with tasks addressed to all processes. All processes developed systematically throughout the period studied. Structural equation modeling revealed a powerful common construct underlying reasoning and language processes. All domain-specific cognitive, language, or awareness processes represented this common factor equally well. This factor was related to attention control, shifting flexibility, and working memory but this relation varied with development, being dominated by attention control at 9–11, inferential-representational processes at 11–13, and awareness-symbolic processes at 13–15. Piecewise linear modeling showed that transition points between phases are marked by phase-dominating processes. Modeling ability and age differentiation with increasing g suggested some ability differentiation at the end of developmental cycles suggesting that g-ability relations are re-worked anew in successive developmental cycles. Implications for developmental, cognitive, and brain science are discussed. © 2017 Elsevier Inc.