2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2015.04.013
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Modulation of resource allocation by intelligent individuals in linguistic, mathematical and visuo-spatial tasks

Abstract: This study investigates two questions: first, how individuals with high-intelligence allocate cognitive resources while solving linguistic, mathematical and visuo-spatial tasks with varying degree of difficulty as compared to individuals with low intelligence? Second, how to distinguish between high and low intelligent individuals by analyzing pupil dilation and eye blink together? We measured the response time, error rates along with pupil dilation and eye blink rate that indicate resource allocation. We divi… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Ahern and Beatty's study (1979) found that high Gf individuals had a smaller TEPR (i.e., allocated fewer resources) when they completed mental arithmetic problems of all difficulty levels, supporting the efficiency hypothesis, as the highly intelligent people required fewer attention resources to solve problems due to their higher efficiency. Furthermore, a recent pupillometry study (Lee et al, 2015) found similar results, supporting the efficiency hypothesis in arithmetic problems.…”
Section: Fluid Intelligence and Attention Resource Allocationsupporting
confidence: 64%
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“…Ahern and Beatty's study (1979) found that high Gf individuals had a smaller TEPR (i.e., allocated fewer resources) when they completed mental arithmetic problems of all difficulty levels, supporting the efficiency hypothesis, as the highly intelligent people required fewer attention resources to solve problems due to their higher efficiency. Furthermore, a recent pupillometry study (Lee et al, 2015) found similar results, supporting the efficiency hypothesis in arithmetic problems.…”
Section: Fluid Intelligence and Attention Resource Allocationsupporting
confidence: 64%
“…This new hypothesis suggests that the interaction between task type and task difficulty can influence the relationship between Gf and resource allocation. In particular, in exploitation tasks (such as arithmetic problems), task difficulty may not influence this relationship, as high Gf people use fewer resources to efficiently resolve tasks in tasks of all difficulties, supporting the efficiency hypothesis (Ahern & Beatty, 1979;Lee et al, 2015). In contrast, in tasks mainly involving exploration (such as graphic symmetry tasks and mental folding tasks requiring constant exploration of the problem space), task difficulty may influence the relationship such that compared with average Gf individuals, high Gf individuals allocate more resources for difficult tasks and fewer or nearly equal resources for easy tasks, supporting the resource hypothesis.…”
Section: Figure 1 Illustrations Of the (A) Efficiency Hypothesis And mentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Eyeblinks tend to happen at implicit breakpoints in information processing, e.g., when listening to a speaker who pauses during a speech (Nakano & Kitazawa, 2010), at the end of a sentence, or when turning over a page while reading (Hall, 1945;Orchard & Stern, 1991). The observation of such temporal relationships between blinking and information processing has led to the suggestion that spontaneous eyeblinks reflect cognitive processing (Lee, Ojha, Kang, & Lee, 2015;Nakano, Kato, Morito, Itoi, & Kitazawa, 2013;Pivik & Dykman, 2004;Siegle, Ichikawa, & Steinhauer, 2008;Sirevaag et al, 1999;Van Bochove, Van Der Haegen, Notebaert, & Verguts, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%