Berg C A, Sternberg R J
Adv Child Dev Behav. 1985;19:1-47. doi: 10.1016/s0065-2407(08)60387-0.
In this article, we have reviewed research in diverse domains that has provided evidence for the assertion that intelligence can be construed, in part, as a response to novelty. We began by distinguishing two types of continuities, namely, the continuity in the fundamental nature of intelligence throughout development and the relative stability of individual differences in intellectual abilities at various ages. Current empirical and theoretical work has culminated in a proposition that the actual nature of intelligence is discontinuous, at least in the early years of life, and that individual differences in intellectual functions are unstable (Bayley, 1970; McCall, 1979a,b). Research on aspects of an infant's response to novelty and the relationship between this response and later intellectual functioning was examined and interpreted as reflective not only of one element of continuity in the actual nature of intelligence throughout development but also of a stable source of individual differences in intellectual development. Other literature reviewed suggested that the interest in and ability to deal with novelty remains an integral component of individual differences in intelligence throughout the life span. A framework for conceptualizing intelligence as, in part, the response to novelty was offered to provide some synthesis to the literature we have reviewed on the relationship between one's response to novelty and intelligence across the life span. This framework comprises two major aspects: a motivational aspect, referring to interest in, curiosity about, and preference for novelty, and an information-extraction aspect, referring to component processes that are involved in the acquisition of novel information. These two aspects of dealing with novelty were evident in the literature that was reviewed above. They seem integral to intellectual development. We are not alone in positing the importance of one's response to novelty as a major element of individual differences in intelligence across the life span. Other researchers and theorists from diverse disciplines within psychology, such as artificial intelligence, Piagetian psychology, and psychometric intelligence, as well as layperson's commonsense notions about intelligence, have also indicated the importance of the ability to deal with novelty in intelligent functioning. We view the motivational and information-processing response to novelty as a source of stability in intellectual functions across development and as an element of continuity in the actual nature of intelligence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在本文中,我们回顾了不同领域的研究,这些研究为智力可以部分地被理解为对新奇事物的反应这一论断提供了证据。我们首先区分了两种连续性,即智力在整个发展过程中基本性质的连续性以及不同年龄阶段智力能力个体差异的相对稳定性。当前的实证和理论研究最终得出一个观点,即智力的实际性质是不连续的,至少在生命的早期是这样,而且智力功能的个体差异是不稳定的(贝利,1970;麦考尔,1979a,b)。对婴儿对新奇事物的反应及其与后期智力功能之间关系的研究进行了考察,并被解释为不仅反映了智力在整个发展过程中实际性质的一个连续性要素,也反映了智力发展中个体差异的一个稳定来源。所回顾的其他文献表明,对新奇事物的兴趣和应对能力在整个生命周期中仍然是智力个体差异的一个不可或缺的组成部分。我们提供了一个将智力部分地概念化为对新奇事物的反应的框架,以便对我们所回顾的关于一个人对新奇事物的反应与整个生命周期中的智力之间关系的文献进行某种综合。这个框架包括两个主要方面:一个是动机方面,指对新奇事物的兴趣、好奇心和偏好;另一个是信息提取方面,指参与获取新信息的组成过程。处理新奇事物的这两个方面在上述所回顾的文献中是明显的。它们似乎是智力发展不可或缺的。我们并非唯一将一个人对新奇事物的反应的重要性假定为整个生命周期中智力个体差异的一个主要要素的人。来自心理学不同学科的其他研究人员和理论家,如人工智能、皮亚杰心理学和心理测量智力,以及外行人对智力的常识概念,也都表明了应对新奇事物的能力在智能功能中的重要性。我们将对新奇事物的动机和信息处理反应视为智力功能在整个发展过程中的稳定性来源以及智力实际性质的连续性要素。(摘要截选至400词)