2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.intell.2015.12.003
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The effects of language bias and cultural bias estimated using the method of correlated vectors on a large database of IQ comparisons between native Dutch and ethnic minority immigrants from non-Western countries

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Cited by 22 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…The distribution of Western and non-Western immigrants represents the immigrant population in Switzerland and Germany well [2, 3], and thus all individuals with a migration background were included in the following analyses. However, there are studies that revealed group differences in intelligence across individuals from Western and immigrants from non-Western countries [37]. In the present study, the sample of immigrants from non-Western countries was not large enough to analyze such group differences.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…The distribution of Western and non-Western immigrants represents the immigrant population in Switzerland and Germany well [2, 3], and thus all individuals with a migration background were included in the following analyses. However, there are studies that revealed group differences in intelligence across individuals from Western and immigrants from non-Western countries [37]. In the present study, the sample of immigrants from non-Western countries was not large enough to analyze such group differences.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…First, the differences in GMA based on immigrant status should be explored in more countries throughout the world, given the ubiquity of the use of cognitive assessments in personnel selection systems (Ryan et al, ). Second, more research should be conducted internationally on the differences in GMA between native population majority and ethnic minority groups, similar to what has been done in the United States (Roth et al, ; Schmitt et al, ) and the Netherlands (te Nijenhuis & van der Flier, ; te Nijenhuis et al, ). Third, the mechanisms underlying the GMA differences based on immigrant status should be more thoroughly understood so that they can potentially be proactively reduced and extended to non‐immigrant ethnic groups when possible.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…de Meijer et al (2006) found larger differences in favor of non-immigrants with firstgeneration immigrants and smaller differences with second-generation applicants. Similarly, a meta-analysis by te Nijenhuis et al (2016) found immigrant and non-immigrant groups differed by between one-half and one full standard deviation, depending on the verbal and g saturation of the subtest, the immigrant group compared to, and the length of stay in the country (e.g., second-generation immigrants generally score higher than first-generation immigrants). These generational differences are particularly interesting from an adverse impact perspective because they shift the focus from racial factors to sociocultural factors.…”
Section: Immigrant Versus Non-immigrant Differences In Gmamentioning
confidence: 97%
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