The Best Way to Measure Intelligence Could Be Brain Imaging

Thursday, August 2, 2012 - 11:31 in Psychology & Sociology

Global Brain Connectivity WUSTL Image/Michael Cole There are a lot of hurdles to accurately predicting intelligence, from the difficulty of defining exactly what it is to accurately understanding the complexities of the human brain. Some techniques are surprisingly simple, like measuring the size of the brain. But others, like a new study that suggests brain imaging could crack the IQ code, require a little more finesse. Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis found they could determine 10 percent of individual differences in intelligence by determining the strength of neural pathways, specifically those branching out from the left lateral prefrontal cortex to the rest of the brain. That part, their research suggests, acts as a director for the rest of the brain, overseeing how the individual pieces work in tandem and tweaking the process when necessary. For the study, researchers set participants in fMRI machines, then had them perform tasks...

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