Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?

Correlations between single self-ratings of intelligence and IQ are rather small (.20-.25) in college samples. Possible improvements in traditional methods were investigated by employing (a) indirect questions and (b) aggregation. To evaluate these improvements, we compared the validity of aggregat...

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Main Author: Lysy, Daria C.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5833
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-58332018-01-05T17:32:46Z Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ? Lysy, Daria C. Correlations between single self-ratings of intelligence and IQ are rather small (.20-.25) in college samples. Possible improvements in traditional methods were investigated by employing (a) indirect questions and (b) aggregation. To evaluate these improvements, we compared the validity of aggregated and unaggregated versions of direct measures with four indirect measures: Gough's Intellectual efficiency scale, Hogan's Intellect composite scale, Sternberg's Behavior Check List, and Trapnell's Smart scale. We also compared the performance of a novel self-report measure, Paulhus' Over-Claiming Questionnaire, which shares properties of IQ tests and self-report measures. All measures were administered to two large samples of undergraduates (Ns = 310, 326), who also took an IQ test. Results with traditional self - reports showed that both direct and indirect measures can reliably predict IQ scores but the validity cap appears to be .30 in our competitive college sample. As a rule, the most valid of the traditional items were global characterizations of mental ability; Aggregation benefited indirect more than direct measures. The novel measure, the Over-Claiming Questionnaire, outperformed all other measures with a validity cap of about .50. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2009-03-10T18:03:02Z 2009-03-10T18:03:02Z 1997 1997-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5833 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 2705345 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description Correlations between single self-ratings of intelligence and IQ are rather small (.20-.25) in college samples. Possible improvements in traditional methods were investigated by employing (a) indirect questions and (b) aggregation. To evaluate these improvements, we compared the validity of aggregated and unaggregated versions of direct measures with four indirect measures: Gough's Intellectual efficiency scale, Hogan's Intellect composite scale, Sternberg's Behavior Check List, and Trapnell's Smart scale. We also compared the performance of a novel self-report measure, Paulhus' Over-Claiming Questionnaire, which shares properties of IQ tests and self-report measures. All measures were administered to two large samples of undergraduates (Ns = 310, 326), who also took an IQ test. Results with traditional self - reports showed that both direct and indirect measures can reliably predict IQ scores but the validity cap appears to be .30 in our competitive college sample. As a rule, the most valid of the traditional items were global characterizations of mental ability; Aggregation benefited indirect more than direct measures. The novel measure, the Over-Claiming Questionnaire, outperformed all other measures with a validity cap of about .50. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Lysy, Daria C.
spellingShingle Lysy, Daria C.
Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?
author_facet Lysy, Daria C.
author_sort Lysy, Daria C.
title Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?
title_short Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?
title_full Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?
title_fullStr Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?
title_full_unstemmed Self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of IQ?
title_sort self-reports of intelligence: are they useful as proxy measures of iq?
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5833
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