Creativity and Intelligence Revisited: A Latent Variable Analysis of Wallach and Kogan () 论文

2008Creativity Research Journal引用 222
Creativity in Education and NeuroscienceEducational Methods and Teacher DevelopmentEducation, Achievement, and Giftedness

摘要

Many decades of research have shown that creativity and intelligence are modestly related. Some studies, however, have found that creativity and intelligence are essentially unrelated. The best example may be Wallach and Kogan's (1965 Wallach , M. A. , & Kogan , N. ( 1965 ). Modes of thinking in young children: A study of the creativity–intelligence distinction . New York : Holt, Rinehart, & Winston . [Google Scholar]) landmark study of 151 children. In that study, 10 measures of creativity didn't correlate with 10 measures of intelligence and academic achievement (average r = .09). The present research reanalyzed these data using latent variable analysis, which can (a) assess the relations between latent creativity and intelligence variables and (b) model method variance shared by the creativity tasks. Consistent with past research, the latent originality and fluency variables significantly predicted intelligence. The relations' magnitude (around r = .20) was consistent with past research, suggesting that Wallach and Kogan's data replicate other studies of creativity and intelligence.

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