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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Differences in achievement not in intelligence in the north and south of Italy: Comments on
Antonella D’amicoJack A. NaglieriSanto Di NuovoMaurizio Cardacisubject
Social PsychologyIntelligence quotientmedia_common.quotation_subjectIntelligenceCognitive PsychologyCognitionAssessmentLiteracyInfant mortalityEducationDevelopmental psychologyRaven's Progressive MatricesFlynn effectCognitive Psychology; Intelligence; AssessmentDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive Assessment SystemPsychologyPASS theory of intelligencemedia_commondescription
Abstract Lynn (2010a, 2010b) argued that individuals from south Italy have a lower IQ than individuals from north Italy, and that these differences in IQ are at the basis of north–south gap in income, education, infant mortality, stature, and literacy. In the present paper, we discuss several theoretical and methodological aspects which we regard as flaws of Lynn's studies. Moreover, we report scores of southern Italian children on Raven's Progressive Matrices and a north–south comparison for the PASS theory of intelligence as measured by the Cognitive Assessment System (Taddei & Naglieri, 2006). Both results reveal similar levels of performance of northern and southern Italian children in fluid intelligence and PASS (Planning, Attention, Simultaneous, and Successive) cognitive abilities.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-02-01 | Learning and Individual Differences |