In this study, we will briefly review the evidence for the correlation between brain size and intelligence by discussing the results of meta-analyses. We will focus our study on discussing factors complicating the analysis of the relationship between brain size and intelligence. These factors may ...
These factors may explain why different degrees of the correlation were observed in the previous studies. Finally, we will briefly discuss the direction of future studies to understand why people with bigger brain are smarter. 展开 关键词: Age, brain size, human, intelligence, lateralization and ...
The association between brain volume and intelligence is of genetic origin - Posthuma, Geus, et al. - 2002 () Citation Context ...ead size measures, though that correlation is also reliable and significant [106]. Moreover brain ... Posthuma,Danille,De,... - 《Nature Neuroscience》 被引量...
A careful re-analysis of over 460 correlation matrices of cognitive ability tests, indicating a three-stratum hierarchical structure of intelligence with the g factor at the top. Book Google Scholar Deary, I. J. Looking Down on Human Intelligence: From Psychometrics to the Brain. (Oxford Univ...
If a person is “smart,” that typically means the person has enduring intelligence, whereas if a person is “ashamed,” that typically means the person is temporarily feeling shame. Certain descriptors make sense at both the trait and state level. For example, someone could be momentarily ...
E. et al. Common genetic variants explain the majority of the correlation between height and intelligence: the generation Scotland study. Behav. Genet. 44, 91–96 (2014). PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar Williams, K. M. et al. Phenotypic and genotypic correlation between myopia and ...
sensory impairments. It weighs just 38 grams and measures only 32 cubic centimeters in size. It can be used in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy and other neurological diseases, co-developer Peng Lei said at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai on ...
on verbal fluency suggest that these tests not only demand executive functioning but require numerous different cognitive processes, including working memory, self-monitoring, cognitive flexibility, lexical selection, phonetic encoding, word knowledge, verbal long-term memory and verbal intelligence (e.g....
Greater cortical thickness during early brain development is in general positively associated with intelligence and cognitive skills in later stages of life35. The IBA also indicates that cortical thickness changes heterogeneously across the cortex, in line with previous studies36. The association cortices...
Full size image Task FC outperforms resting FC for predicting cognition, but not personality or mental health We computed FC (Pearson’s correlations) among the average time courses of 400 cortical52 and 19 subcortical53 regions (Fig. 1B, C), yielding a 419 × 419 FC matrix for each...