While the existence of
g as a statistical regularity is well-established and uncontroversial among experts, there is no consensus as to what causes the positive intercorrelations. Several explanations have been proposed.
Mental energy or efficiency Charles Spearman reasoned that correlations between tests reflected the influence of a common causal factor, a general mental ability that enters into performance on all kinds of mental tasks. However, he thought that the best indicators of
g were those tests that reflected what he called
the eduction of relations and correlates, which included abilities such as
deduction,
induction, problem solving, grasping relationships, inferring rules, and spotting differences and similarities. Spearman hypothesized that
g was equivalent with "mental energy". However, this was more of a metaphorical explanation, and he remained agnostic about the physical basis of this energy, expecting that future research would uncover the exact physiological nature of
g. Following Spearman,
Arthur Jensen maintained that all mental tasks tap into
g to some degree. According to Jensen, the
g factor represents a "distillate" of scores on different tests rather than a summation or an average of such scores, with factor analysis acting as the
distillation procedure. He also suggested that given the associations between
g and
elementary cognitive tasks, it should be possible to construct a
ratio scale test of
g that uses
time as the unit of measurement.
Sampling theory The so-called sampling theory of
g, originally developed by
Edward Thorndike and
Godfrey Thomson, proposes that the existence of the positive manifold can be explained without reference to a unitary underlying capacity. According to this theory, there are a number of uncorrelated mental processes, and all tests draw upon different samples of these processes. The inter correlations between tests are caused by an overlap between processes tapped by the tests. Thus, the positive manifold arises due to a measurement problem, an inability to measure more fine-grained, presumably uncorrelated mental processes. The sampling theory is also consistent with the observation that more complex mental tasks have higher
g loading, because more complex tasks are expected to involve a larger sampling of neural elements and therefore have more of them in common with other tasks. Some researchers have argued that the sampling model invalidates
g as a psychological concept, because the model suggests that
g factors derived from different test batteries simply reflect the shared elements of the particular tests contained in each battery rather than a
g that is common to all tests. Similarly, high correlations between different batteries could be due to them measuring the same set of abilities rather than
the same ability. Critics have argued that the sampling theory is incongruent with certain empirical findings. Based on the sampling theory, one might expect that related cognitive tests share many elements and thus be highly correlated. However, some closely related tests, such as forward and backward digit span, are only modestly correlated, while some seemingly completely dissimilar tests, such as vocabulary tests and Raven's matrices, are consistently highly correlated. Another problematic finding is that brain damage frequently leads to specific cognitive impairments rather than a general impairment one might expect based on the sampling theory.
Mutualism The "mutualism" model of
g proposes that cognitive processes are initially uncorrelated, but that the positive manifold arises during individual development due to mutual beneficial relations between cognitive processes. Thus there is no single process or capacity underlying the positive correlations between tests. During the course of development, the theory holds, any one particularly efficient process will benefit other processes, with the result that the processes will end up being correlated with one another. Thus similarly high IQs in different persons may stem from quite different initial advantages that they had. Critics have argued that the observed correlations between the
g loadings and the heritability coefficients of subtests are problematic for the mutualism theory.
Gf-Gc theory Raymond Cattell, a student of Charles Spearman's, modified the unitary
g factor model and divided
g into two broad, relatively independent domains: fluid intelligence (G
f) and crystallized intelligence (G
c). G
f is conceptualized as a capacity to figure out novel problems, and it is best assessed with tests with little cultural or scholastic content, such as Raven's matrices. G
c can be thought of as consolidated knowledge, reflecting the skills and information that an individual acquires and retains throughout his or her life. G
c is dependent on education and other forms of
acculturation, and it is best assessed with tests that emphasize scholastic and cultural knowledge. G
f can be thought to primarily consist of
current reasoning and problem solving capabilities, while G
c reflects the outcome of
previously executed cognitive processes. The rationale for the separation of G
f and G
c was to explain individuals' cognitive development over time. While G
f and G
c have been found to be highly correlated, they differ in the way they change over a lifetime. G
f tends to peak at around age 20, slowly declining thereafter. In contrast, G
c is stable or increases across adulthood. A single general factor has been criticized as obscuring this bifurcated pattern of development. Cattell argued that G
f reflected individual differences in the efficiency of the
central nervous system. G
c was, in Cattell's thinking, the result of a person "investing" his or her G
f in learning experiences throughout life. Cattell, together with
John Horn, later expanded the
Gf-Gc model to include a number of other broad abilities, such as G
q (quantitative reasoning) and G
v (visual-spatial reasoning). While all the broad ability factors in the extended G
f-G
c model are positively correlated and thus would enable the extraction of a higher order
g factor, Cattell and Horn maintained that it would be erroneous to posit that a general factor underlies these broad abilities. They argued that
g factors computed from different test batteries are not invariant and would give different values of
g, and that the correlations among tests arise because it is difficult to test just one ability at a time. However, several researchers have suggested that the G
f-G
c model is compatible with a
g-centered understanding of cognitive abilities. For example,
John B. Carroll's
three-stratum model of intelligence includes both G
f and G
c together with a higher-order
g factor. Based on factor analyses of many data sets, some researchers have also argued that G
f and
g are one and the same factor and that
g factors from different test batteries are substantially invariant provided that the batteries are large and diverse.
Theories of uncorrelated abilities Several theorists have proposed that there are intellectual abilities that are uncorrelated with each other. Among the earliest was
L.L. Thurstone who created a model of
primary mental abilities representing supposedly independent domains of intelligence. However, Thurstone's tests of these abilities were found to produce a strong general factor. He argued that the lack of independence among his tests reflected the difficulty of constructing "factorially pure" tests that measured just one ability. Similarly,
J.P. Guilford proposed a model of intelligence that comprised up to 180 distinct, uncorrelated abilities, and claimed to be able to test all of them. Later analyses have shown that the factorial procedures Guilford presented as evidence for his theory did not provide support for it, and that the test data that he claimed provided evidence against
g did in fact exhibit the usual pattern of intercorrelations after correction for statistical artifacts.
Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences More recently,
Howard Gardner has developed the
theory of multiple intelligences. He posits the existence of nine different and independent domains of intelligence, such as mathematical, linguistic, spatial, musical, bodily-kinesthetic, meta-cognitive, and existential intelligences, and contends that individuals who fail in some of them may excel in others. According to Gardner, tests and schools traditionally emphasize only linguistic and logical abilities while neglecting other forms of intelligence. While popular among
educationalists, Gardner's theory has been much criticized by psychologists and psychometricians. One criticism is that the theory contradicts both scientific and everyday usages of the word
intelligence. Several researchers have argued that not all of Gardner's
intelligences fall within the cognitive sphere. For example, Gardner contends that a successful career in professional sports or popular music reflects bodily-kinesthetic
intelligence and musical
intelligence, respectively, even though one might usually talk of athletic and musical
skills,
talents, or
abilities instead. Another criticism of Gardner's theory is that many of his purportedly independent domains of intelligence are in fact correlated with each other. Responding to empirical analyses showing correlations between the domains, Gardner has argued that the correlations exist because of the
common format of tests and because all tests require linguistic and logical skills. His critics have in turn pointed out that not all IQ tests are administered in the paper-and-pencil format, that aside from linguistic and logical abilities, IQ test batteries contain also measures of, for example, spatial abilities, and that elementary cognitive tasks (for example, inspection time and reaction time) that do not involve linguistic or
logical reasoning correlate with conventional IQ batteries, too.
Sternberg's three classes of intelligence Robert Sternberg, working with various colleagues, has also suggested that intelligence has dimensions independent of
g. He argues that there are three classes of intelligence: analytic, practical, and creative. According to Sternberg, traditional psychometric tests measure only analytic intelligence, and should be augmented to test creative and practical intelligence as well. He has devised several tests to this effect. Sternberg equates analytic intelligence with academic intelligence, and contrasts it with practical intelligence, defined as an ability to deal with ill-defined real-life problems. Tacit intelligence is an important component of practical intelligence, consisting of knowledge that is not explicitly taught but is required in many real-life situations. Assessing creativity independent of intelligence tests has traditionally proved difficult, but Sternberg and colleagues have claimed to have created valid tests of creativity, too. The validation of Sternberg's theory requires that the three abilities tested are substantially uncorrelated and have independent
predictive validity. Sternberg has conducted many experiments which he claims confirm the validity of his theory, but several researchers have disputed this conclusion. For example, in his reanalysis of a validation study of Sternberg's STAT test,
Nathan Brody showed that the predictive validity of the STAT, a test of three allegedly independent abilities, was almost solely due to a single general factor underlying the tests, which Brody equated with the
g factor.
Flynn's model James Flynn has argued that intelligence should be conceptualized at three different levels: brain physiology, cognitive differences between individuals, and social trends in intelligence over time. According to this model, the
g factor is a useful concept with respect to individual differences but its explanatory power is limited when the focus of investigation is either brain physiology, or, especially, the effect of social trends on intelligence. Flynn has criticized the notion that cognitive gains over time, or the Flynn effect, are "hollow" if they cannot be shown to be increases in
g. He argues that the Flynn effect reflects shifting social priorities and individuals' adaptation to them. To apply the individual differences concept of
g to the Flynn effect is to confuse different levels of analysis. On the other hand, according to Flynn, it is also fallacious to deny, by referring to trends in intelligence over time, that some individuals have "better brains and minds" to cope with the cognitive demands of their particular time. At the level of brain physiology, Flynn has emphasized both that localized neural clusters can be affected differently by cognitive exercise, and that there are important factors that affect all neural clusters. == Related theories ==