The paper explores the relationship between intelligence and the semantic processing of natural language quantifiers. The first study revealed that intelligence is positively associated with the subjects' performance when solving a picture verification task with one of the four types of sentences: Aristotelian (e.g. 'All cars are red'), parity (e.g. 'An even number of cars are red'), numerical (e.g. 'More than five cars are red'), and proportional ('More than half of the cars are red'). The strongest relationship was observed between the cognitive ability and the accuracy of proportional sentences, in accordance with the computational theory which predicts the highest engagement of working memory (WM) within the group of proportional quantifiers. Moreover, individuals with higher intelligence reacted faster, but this was observed only in case of quantifiers with low complexity. Exploring further, in the second study we found that WM and intelligence were both significant predictors of ...
MOST intelligent people are accurate and SOME fast people are intelligent. Intelligence, working memory, and semantic processing of quantifiers from a computational perspective / Zajenkowski, Marcin; Szymanik, Jakub Krzysztof. - In: INTELLIGENCE. - ISSN 0160-2896. - 41:5(2013), pp. 456-466. [10.1016/j.intell.2013.06.020]
MOST intelligent people are accurate and SOME fast people are intelligent. Intelligence, working memory, and semantic processing of quantifiers from a computational perspective
Jakub Szymanik
2013-01-01
Abstract
The paper explores the relationship between intelligence and the semantic processing of natural language quantifiers. The first study revealed that intelligence is positively associated with the subjects' performance when solving a picture verification task with one of the four types of sentences: Aristotelian (e.g. 'All cars are red'), parity (e.g. 'An even number of cars are red'), numerical (e.g. 'More than five cars are red'), and proportional ('More than half of the cars are red'). The strongest relationship was observed between the cognitive ability and the accuracy of proportional sentences, in accordance with the computational theory which predicts the highest engagement of working memory (WM) within the group of proportional quantifiers. Moreover, individuals with higher intelligence reacted faster, but this was observed only in case of quantifiers with low complexity. Exploring further, in the second study we found that WM and intelligence were both significant predictors of ...I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione



